122 N.Y.S. 118 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
No. 258 West Houston street was owned by the city, having been purchased in condemnation proceedings for a school site. The complaint alleged that on May 26, 1907, Mary Gray was lawfully passing along the sidewalk in front of the premises and while so doing her foot and leg were caused to go into an opening of a partly uncovered coal hole and thereby said deceased received severe injuries which thereafter, on the 2d day of June, 1907, caused her death. The-complaint alleges negligence and also 61 and in causing, permitting and allowing the said coal -hole or opening in the said sidewalk to be and remain a nuisance.”
It appeared that on election night in November, 1906, this building, being unoccupied, was wrecked by boys to a considerable extent and among other things the coal hole cover was stolen. The city’s proof,was that a flagstone was placed over the coal hole; but the main defense is that the woman did not fall into the hole at all. It is conceded that she fell in the street; that she broke her leg; that septicemia developed and that she . died.
The only witness claiming to have seen the accident was Mary E. Daggett, who testified that on the 26th of May, 1907, she resided at No. 254 West Houston street and had lived there about three years. She testified : “ I saw an 'accident on the sidewalk of West Houston street on Sunday morning, the 26th of May, 1907, * * * around 8 o’clock. * * * I saw a woman go down in the hole in front of her; I never saw the woman in my life before ; I was behind her at that time. * * * I saw her go down in the hole and I went to help lift her out; the hole was in the sidewalk, a coal hole. * * * There was no cover over the hole at all of any kind, nothing at all. * 'x' * After I saw the woman go in - the hole I lifted her out; there was a gentleman had a room off me, and he was right behind me, and I couldn’t .lift her alone, and I gave her assistance, and I took her as far as the corner of Varick street into the baker’s * * * and I left her.” Cross-examination: “ I do not know who the woman was who fell in that hole, that I saw. I don’t know to this day who that woman was. * * * Somebody
Dr. O’Mara, for the plaintiff, testified that he saw her on Sunday morning, the twenty-sixth of May. “I found a compound fracture of both bones of the leg, the left leg, I believe it was; one of the bones in communicatidn with the outside world. I treated her, I think it was for two days, until she went to the hospital.” Cross-examination : “ I did examine the nature of the fracture. * * * The bone was protruding; that is the tibia. *. * ** I don’t think she could walk any distance with that; she could not walk half a block with it. I cannot say what a person’s capability of suffering pain is, but my impression is that she could not walk at all. I did ask this woman what happened to her when she met with the injury; I wanted to know how she got hurt. She said that she fell on the street; I think she said Hudson street. * * * My recollection is she told me when I examined her on Sunday morning that she had fallen on Hudson street. "x" * * ” Redirect examination : “ Q. May she have said Houston street ? A. Well, she might have ; I won’t swear to it, but my best recollection is she said Hudson street.”
John Gray, the plaintiff, testified: “ I found Mrs, Daggett, the lady that was on the stand this morning. I never knew the woman before.”
William Ryan, a policeman, testified he called at the house of Mrs. Gray on the twenty-eighth of May with Officer Dwyer. “ She told me' that while she was crossing Hudson street and Houston she stepped on a round stone and fell to the sidewalk. She said she was crossing Fludson street and Houston. When she made that statement Officer Dwyer and I think-it was her daughter were present. The young woman who is in court with the hlack hat I think is her daughter. She was.present when her mother stated that she had fallen crossing Hudson street; Hudson street torn up at that time. * * * At the time I wrote down what she told me as to how the accident happened in a book. I have got the book.” Witness produced the book. ■ “Q. Is this a memorandum made by you at the time? A. At the time. I did make a report at the station house that day.” The plaintiff did not offer this memorandum from the book or examine about it. - ■ ■
Dwyer testified that he was present at this conversation. This was when the ambulance was called to take Mrs. Gray to the hospital from her house upon the advice of the doctor. “ The officer asked the lady her pedigree, her name," and so forth, and also ‘inquired how she received the accident, and'she stated that Sunday, morning she stepped on a stone at Hudson and Houston street and turned .on her ankle; there was a young lady present in the apartment ; I think that is the young woman who is in court.”
Gustave Seitter testified : I remember in assisting to carry Mrs. Gray home on the day she met with the accident; I found her at the córner of Houston and Hudson. I was there when the witness Lynch came there. She was sitting right in the doorway of the butcher shop. * * * She did not say anything as to what caused her to fall. * * * She could not walk at that, time; the witness Lynch and myself assisted her to her home.”
Winifred Dwyer, her daughter, testified that after she had heard of her.mother’s injury she called at the house. . “ I said ‘ What happened to you ? ’ She said ‘ I fell.’ Q. Did she tell yon where. ? A.
Dr. Wadhams, the ambulance surgeon testified: “I did have a talk with the deceased as to how that accident occurred. * * " * Q. Were there other persons present at the time when you asked her? A. There were. Q. Who? ' A. I think there were two police officers and the patient’s daughter. Q. Did the patient in their presence tell you what caused her injuries?” That was objected to, under sections 834 and 836 of the Code, and sustained. “ Q. Did she tell you that she tripped and fell on a cobblestone at Hudson street and Houston street?” Excluded. • “Q. Did she state anything to you in the presence of those persons as to what caused * * * the accident?” Excluded. “Q. Were you her attending physician ? ” Excluded. “ Q. In what capacity were you called in to attend, if at all, this woman ? ” Excluded. “Q. At whose request did you call at this house? A. At the request of some one in authority at the hospital; I could’nt say. Q. Was it in response to a call for an ambulance? A. It was. * * * I don’t think it possible for this woman to walk, in my opinion, in the condition in which I had found her. * * * She had her leg all in splints and everything of that kind when I saw her; even taking the splints off it was not possible for her to walk. I know the nature and extent of that woman’s fracture.” The evidence of this witness of decedent’s statements of where, and how the accident occurred was competent, and it was error to exclude it. (Griffiths v. Met. St. R. Co., 171 N. Y. 106 ; Green v. Met. St. R. Co., Id. 201; Benjamin v. Village of Tupper Lake, 110 App. Div. 426; Travis v. Haan, 119 id. 138.)
The court charged: “ Before making a remark about the evidence, the court reminds you that there is no evidence in this case that there was any negligent condition of the highway existing at Hudson and Houston streets on the day of the accident, and that
So that the case was submitted solely upon the doctrine of nuisance for the maintenance by the city of an unprotected coal hole in the sidewalk in front of its own property, Ho. 258 West Houston street. I eliminate from consideration a large amount of evidence tending to' show that this coal hole was covered with a flagstone, also that the evidence is extremely unsatisfactory and almost neg-, ligible .that the flagstone was off at the .time, or at any time reasonably proximate to the date of the injury. Looking solely for proof of the locus in quo of the accident, assuming the coal hole to have . been unprotected, ..the only evidénce is that of Mrs, Daggett, who,, testified that she saw a woman whom she had never seen before, whose name she did not know, and whom she does not .now know, • go down in the hole on the morning of May twenty-sixth, that she and McCarthy pulled her out, that she helped her to walk to the bakery shop on the corner of Yariek street, and that there she left her, the woman then saying that she was all right. McCarthy is not ■ produced. ■
Op the other hand, the decedent had a compound fracture of both bones of her leg, which, according to the medical testimony, prevented her from walking. She is found sitting in front óf a butcher shop at the corner df Hudson and Houston streets with her bone protruding. It was impossible for her. in her condition to have walked that far from the alleged scene of the accident. From. Hudson and' Houston she was carried by Lynch and Seitter to her home. She said-to -various witnesses that she had fallen in Hudson. ■ Street. Her attending physician and two policemen who. saw her two days after the accident, so testified, Her.,daughter had said that she had fallen in. Hudson street It is clear that the woman -that,Mrs. Daggett says she saw fall hi the coal hole is pot identified as the decedent. The plaintiff has not sustained the cause-of action : set up in the complaint and submitted to ■ the jury. The verdict was against the weight of evidence.
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed
Ingraham, P. J., Laughlin, Scott and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed apd new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event. , ■ ■■