210 A.D. 523 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1924
The action is brought to recover for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff on October 28, 1922, at five-thirty p. m., when the automobile in which he was riding struck against a housing which inclosed the water pipes of the city of Kingston, which pipes had been laid along the floor of the bridge which carried Albany avenue in the city of Kingston over the tracks of the Ulster and Delaware Railroad Company. The complaint charges liability upon the city of Kingston on the ground that it negligently constructed and maintained this housing. The charge against the defendants Klemm and Huber is negligence in that the motor bus owned by them was negligently so driven that the car in which plaintiff was riding was crowded to the extreme right side of the street as it approached this bridge and came into collision with the housing. The complaint purports to set forth but one cause of action. As against the defendant railroad company the action has been by consent withdrawn.
Albany avenue runs north and south. The water pipes were laid along the easterly side of the bridge The streetway across this bridge is thirty feet wide and the bridge is twenty-two feet in length. On the westerly side of the bridge the barrier is a fence. The housing constructed on the easterly side of the bridge is about three feet in height, having a peaked roof, and “ the top of it was similar to the construction of the fence, being f inch by 4 inch boards.” On the floor of the bridge, in front of this housing and parallel with it, a two by' six plank was laid. The housing was four and two-tenths feet wide and so placed that two and one-tenth feet of its width was within the curb line of the street extended across the bridge. There was no other barrier on the easterly side of the bridge and this construction furnished a more substantial barrier than the fence on the westerly side. Plaintiff’s engineer, when asked if the water pipes could be carried across the bridge in any other way, answered: “ Not across the bridge, no sir; they could not have been taken across the bridge, under the local conditions, any different than what I found them.” This construction was placed in or before 1896 and the pipes and housing have been in the same condition as at the time of the accident for more than twenty-five years, during which period a search of the records of the city discloses that no claim has been filed or action begun on account of injuries received due to this construction. At the close
The plaintiff urges that he was mentally incapacitated on account of his injuries to give the notice required by the statute within the time limited and, therefore, the failure to serve the required, notice should be excused. Upon the record this position is untenable. Plaintiff, an adult, did sign and verify a written notice of claim on the 16th day of November, 1922; and his attorney verified the complaint on the 25th day of November, 1922, stating that the sources of his information, among other things, are conversations with the plaintiff and conversations with the occupants of the car in which plaintiff was riding. Both of these papers were verified within the thirty days after the accident. It was stated
A further question is presented in this court, which was not raised in the trial court, namely, whether or not this is an action grounded in nuisance rather than negligence, and, if so, whether or not it is covered by the provision of the charter above quoted. The statute covers claims for damages for injury caused by an obstruction in the streets of the city because of negligence of the city, or its officers, as to such streets.
The cause of action stated in the complaint is for negligence rather than for nuisance. The phrases in the complaint, which would be proper for an action of nuisance, are interspersed with those charging negligence, and the complaint sets forth all the facts necessary to constitute an action grounded in negligence. There is no attempt to state a separate cause of action for nuisance. The action was tried and decided as a negligence action and no objection thereto was taken. No reason appears why the theory of the case presented to the trial court should not be preserved here; it was so presented by choice and consent of the parties. At no time till now has it been suggested that the claim for which suit is brought did not involve negligence.
Further, the facts disclose that this obstruction was not a nuisance in law; if a nuisance at all, it was a nuisance in fact (Melker v. City of New York, 190 N. Y. 481) and the question would be for the jury; but no request to go to the jury upon this question was made. Indeed, we do not think that the jury would be justified in finding that this housing as placed was a nuisance. The width
The maintenance of this structure and the failure to remove it, if it were an unlawful or dangerous structure, would constitute negligence upon the part of the city.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs to the city of Kingston against the plaintiff.
Judgment unanimously affirmed, with costs to the city of Kingston.