1 Misc. 468 | The Superior Court of New York City | 1893
The action was to recover damages resulting from the negligent acts of the defendant’s servant.
It appears that on August 12, 1890, the plaintiff, then thirteen years of age, while walking through Jay street, in this
The plaintiff was lawfully upon the sidewalk at the time of the accident, and seeing the thoroughfare clear had the right to continue his journey without anticipating that a driver without warning would attempt to back a team across the sidewalk and imperil his life. The jury having found in favor of the plaintiff upon evidence which satisfactorily sustains their verdict, we must assume for the purpose of this appeal that the facts are as stated by the plaintiff and his witnesses, and not as claimed by the defendant and his witnesses, whose version of the affair was rejected. According to the plaintiff’s evidence it was not the case of a foot traveler attempting to cross a public thoroughfare ahead of vehicles upon nice calculations of the chances of injury, and the authorities relating to such "controversies have, therefore, no application whatever. Nor Avas it a case where the plaintiff saw the impending danger in time to aA-oid it, so that it Avould have been error for the trial judge to have decided as matter of law that the
Ro rule is better settled than that where there is a conflict of evidence or where from the facts and circumstances shown, inferences are to be drawn which are not certain and incontrovertible, the question involved becomes essentially one of fact for the jury. Weil v. Dry Dock, etc., R. Co., 119 N. Y. 152. So where the facts are capable of more than one construction or inferences are to be drawn respecting which minds might differ, the question is one for the jury. Belton v. Baxter, 58 N. Y. 411, and kindred cases.
The defendant had the undoubted right to back his truck upon the sidewalk in front of his place of business for the purpose of loading or unloading merchandise. People v. Cunningham, 1 Den. 524; People v. Horton, 64 N. Y. 610; Welsh v. Wilson, 101 id. 254. But the right must be exercised with care commensurate with the danger. Like the duty imposed upon drivers of vehicles upon the highway to notice foot passengers at street crossings and take reasonable care not to injure them (Murphy v. Orr, 96 N. Y. 14; Moebus v. Herrmann, 108 id. 349), so with drivers who back their trucks upon the sidewalk, they must in like manner notice foot passengers on the sidewalks and exercise like care not to injure them. The owner of the truck had no right to the use of the sidewalk by his truck superior to that possessed by the plaintiff as a pedestrian or traveler.
With these observations upon the facts and law applicable, we must next consider the exception to the judge’s charge, upon which the appellant chiefly relies, which was in answer to the following request made by the plaintiff’s counsel: “ I ask your honor to charge the jury that the same degree of care is not exacted from an infant as from an adult,” to which
Freedman, J., concurs.
Judgment and order affirmed.