175 A.D. 386 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
In the City Court the plaintiff recovered a judgment for $990.88 as damages for personal injuries. On appeal to the Appellate Term this judgment was affirmed and the defendant now appeals by permission of this court. •
The plaintiff alleges in her complaint that on the 22d day July, 1914, at five p. M. while she was crossing Broadway at the southwest corner of Park place going to the southeast corner of Mail street and Broadway, she stepped upon a plank which was entirely loose, that it sank below the next plank so that her left foot caught under the next plank, throwing her to her knees, as the result of which she sustained serious injuries. The defendant is a contracting company, and on the day in question held a contract to do work in the construction of the subway on Broadway at the place of the accident. The particular negligence alleged is the failure to secure this par
To sustain her case the plaintiff called William T. Giesselberg, a traffic policeman, who testified that at the time of the accident he was standing about twenty feet below where the plaintiff fell; that he did not see her fall; that when he first saw her she was lying on her hands and knees across the north-bound car track; that he called an ambulance; that the accident took place about five o’clock in the afternoon; that the roadway there was covered with planking which was not new; that the planks at the place where the accident happened were between the rails; that the planks were close together but below the rail; that when traffic went over the planks they moved slightly. The plaintiff’s attorney at this point endeavored to elicit from this witness the fact that he made reports as to the condition of this planking. He asked the following question: “Q. Now, as to any. particular spot where this accident happened, or with reference to her fall, did you make any report as to that?” This was objected to as improper and incompetent, and the court said: “Not any particular spot on which the plaintiff claims to have met with her accident, but in or about that spot.” The defendant’s counsel objected to the question as modified, but the court allowed the
It was clearly error to allow the plaintiff to show the bad condition of the roadway in parts other than the place of the accident. The issue tendered by the complaint and bill of particulars had been narrowed down to the condition of a particular plank which plaintiff had specified. The plaintiff’s counsel then put the following question: “ Q. Will you state according to your best recollection what the condition wás in any part of that roadway, and what you reported as to what the trouble was with it? You described how it moved?” This was objected to and the objection overruled and exception was noted. The' witness answered: ‘‘Why, a board, when a wagon was running over it, a board would become loose, and we would get the inspector and tell him about it, and he would put a laborer on the job and nail it up.” On cross-examination the witness stated that he had not called anybody’s attention to the planking being loose at this particular spot where the accident happened. He also stated when asked whether he saw the condition of the planking where the plaintiff fell and whether there were any planks loose there, that there did not appear to be any, although he did not examine them; that he did, however, examine them the next day and found that the planks were below the rail slightly, that is, below the top of the rail slightly, perhaps an inch; that the planks appeared to be firm, although he did not examine them particularly, but he walked over them-and found nothing loose.
We think also that the court erred in refusing defendant’s request to charge the jury that “ the defendant’s duty was no greater in this case than that of the municipality in the care of its streets.” This request correctly stated the law as to the. measure of care to be exercised by the defendant in maintaining the temporary roadway. (Carr v. Degnon Contracting Co., 48 Misc. Rep. 531, and cases there cited.)
There was no evidence of actual notice to defendant of the condition of the plank in question and none to show that the defect complained of had existed a length of time sufficient to
On the contrary, the evidence introduced by defendant tends strongly to show that defendant exercised all the care required of it.
The defendant called Jacob Beta, a printer, who testified that on the night of the accident he was near the place and saw the plaintiff falling; he was about ten feet away from her; that although he did not examine the place where she fell, he saw no defect in the roadway; that he saw no part of the planking move when she fell. On cross-examination he stated that he could have felt the plank move; that it was on his side; that the plank might have gone down; that he passed this particular place many times a day and did not see this loose plank. On further cross-examination he said that he was looking in a southerly direction, and if the plank went up, as he was only ten feet away from it, it might have slipped him, but he would have seen it and that he did not see it go up.
Andrew E. Corcoran testified for the defendant that he was an inspector of decking employed by the Degnon Contracting Company; that it was his duty in the morning to go from one end of the fine to the other (from Canal street to Mail street), in the middle of the road inspecting the decking, and when anything needed repair it was his duty to have it fixed immediately; that he came to the place where the accident happened on the night in question; that he arrived there after the accident, observed the planking on the southeast corner of Mail street and Broadway in the space between the car tracks and that there were no loose planks there; that he walked over them and examined them and found them secure; that from the time of the accident until the night of the following day no repairs whatever were made. On cross-examination he said that at the particular point where the accident happened he would pass about ten times a day.
Because of the absence of evidence showing defendant’s negligence and for the errors in the admission of testimony, and the refusal to charge as indicated, the determination of the Appellate Term is reversed as well as the judgment and order
Clarke, P. J., Scott, Smith and Page, JJ., concurred.
Determination of Appellate Term and judgment and order of City Court reversed and complaint dismissed, with costs in all courts. Order to be settled on notice.