135 N.Y.S. 833 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
On the kith day of October, 1910, at about seven-ten p. M., the plaintiff’s intestate was driving a team attached to a heavy load of lumber on the North Hempstead turnpike between Great Neck road and Little Neck road, near Manhasset, Nassau county. The defendant operated an electric surface railroad upon the highway, and at this particular point the tracks were placed at the south side of the highway, which was about 60 feet in width. The roadway is macadamized for a space of about 18 feet in the center, and between the macadam and the
With the plaintiff’s intestate and the other two men at work to get the wagon free from its position right down to the time when the defendant’s car came over the hill, less than 500 feet away, neither Gurrie nor any one of the men appears to have made a move to give the defendant any notice of their situation, and it appears from the record that there was a slight curve just as the car came over the hill, so that the lights which illuminated the tracks for a distance of 200 or 300 feet ahead, would not follow the tracks until the car had been brought around to the straight line. After this car was in sight for the second time, and less than 500 feet away, with a down grade in front of it, Dietz appears to have run toward the car, swinging a lantern, and he says he had reached a point 25 to 50 feet from the front wagon, which was fastened to the second by a' rope and standing at nearly right angles to the track, when the car passed him, and a moment later collided with the rear wheel of the front wagon and then passed on a few feet, where
If the car was being operated at thirty miles per hour, and it seems improbable that it was, the time that it would take to traverse a distance of five hundred feet was not a long time to give notice of the situation to the defendant. The fact that Dietz ran a distance of fifty feet, swinging a lantern (and this is probably twice the distance he actually ran, for he places it from twenty-five to fifty feet), was not notice to the defendant that the plaintiff’s intestate, with his team, was fastened in the tracks. The night was dark and rainy; the glare of his headlights and the watching of his slippery tracks would naturally confine his vision to. the space illuminated by his headlights, and he might not see an ordinary hand lantern at the first moment that it was displaj^ed, or be, able to comprehend its meaning on the instant.. The first and most natural impulse would be to accept it merely .as a signal to stop to take on a passenger, or it might be easily understood that he might properly regard it merely as someone passing along the highway, and, until the demonstration became visible and obviously intended to convey a warning of danger, he would not be negligent in not applying his brakes and making an effort to stop. The undisputed evidence is that as soon as the motorman saw and comprehended the warning, he applied his brakes and made every effort to stop, but the car'was running on a down grade, on a wet, slippery track, and ás' we read the record there was no evidence that this car could, under the circumstances, have been stopped within the distance that must have intervened after the warning was given. The car weighed
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Jenks, P. J., Burr, Thomas and Carr, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.