58 N.Y.S. 561 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
At the close of the plaintiff’s proof the defendant offered no testimony, but stood upon the case as presented by the plaintiff. The action was to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff in coming in contact with a car of the defendant, which, it is claimed, ivas negligently operated. So far as material to the question which controls our judgment in the disposition of this case, it appeared that the plaintiff was an infant three years and four months of age at the time of the accident. We assume that the infant was properly upon the street, and that no negligence is to be attributed to the parent in permitting it to cross the track of the defendant under the circumstances established by the evidence. It appeared that the infant had crossed the track upon which the car was operated, and was about stepping over a loose rail which lay upon the adjoining track, which was being reconstructed and was not then in use, when the car operated by the defendant upon the other track struck the child with the running board upon the car, knocked it under the same and inflicted the injuries of which complaint is made. The claim of negligence upon the part of the defendant is based upon the mismanagement of the car, in not properly controlling the same. The evidence would have authorized the jury to find that the child, in the position it was after crossing the track, would entirely clear the track and the overhang of the car before the car would reach it. Up to that point the jury might well have said that a reasonably prudent person operating the car was justified in assuming that the child would clear the rail and car, and that the latter might be safely run by it. The child in fact cleared the track and came to the loose rail, where it hesitated about getting over. The car was then distant- at least twenty feet. Up to this point the jury might well have thought that the motorman was justified in believing that the child would be clear of danger, that it was safe to continue the speed of the car, and thereby exonerate the defendant from negligence. At this distance (twenty feet) it was evident that the child was in danger of being struck. The
The judgment should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial granted.
All concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.