148 N.Y.S. 63 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
This action was begun, tried and submitted upon the theory of negligence. The plaintiff has recovered a verdict against both defendants for her personal injuries suffered when the motor car in which she was a passenger was driven into a depression in a city street. Both defendants appeal in separate records. The defendant railroad corporation rested its case upon the plaintiff’s proof, content to make motions for her dismissal and for a direction of a verdict. The defendant municipal corporation offered proof and made similar motions. I shall consider the appeal of each defendant in the order of their naming.
Pursuant to chapter 507 of the Laws of 1903, and under a permit from the city authorities prescribed therein, the defendant railroad corporation changed a grade crossing, and incidental to that work cut an opening in the macadam pavement of the said street in order to put down certain temporary tracks. It finished the work about December 8, 1908, took up the tracks and filled up the opening, but did not replace the pavement. The casualty occurred on June 24, 1909.
I think that the obligation upon the defendant when it finished its work in this street was to leave the street, so far as human observation could go, in as safe a condition as the defendant found it. It was not enough to leave it in a safe condition for the time being, but the defendant should have foreseen and should have provided for the effects of the resumed and ordinary use of the street by the public, and of rain or snow and of the changes of weather. (Johnson v. Friel, 50 N. Y. 679; Allen v. Buffalo, Rochester & P. R. Co., 151 id. 434.) If it fell short of due care in its discharge of this obligation, then it could be charged with culpable negligence as to this plaintiff.
The permit under which the defendant worked expressly required that ‘c The openings in the pavement shall be refilled with clean earth, well rammed down as put in, and the pavement immediately replaced and kept in good order at the expense of the company making the opening. In case of emergency or stormy weather, or other unforeseen difficulties, preventing the immediate restoration of the pavement, the same must be done as soon as the obstacle is removed.” It is undis
The defendant insists that its exception to the disposition of its request for an instruction, submitted after the main charge, is well taken. That request was “that no responsibility for the condition of the street rested on the Long Island Railroad if, when the street passed back to the exclusive control of the city, it was reasonably safe.” The court replied: “I think I will leave that as a question of fact for the jury.” The counsel for the plaintiff commented: “I call your Honor’s attention to the word ‘exclusive.’ It did not pass back to the exclusive control of the city so long as any duty of repair remained in the Long Island Railroad.” Thereupon the court, at the request of the defendant, defined in effect the expression “ entire and exclusive control ” as the time when this defendant “removed its tracks and the space was filled in.” The court did not attempt a legal interpretation of these words “exclusive control,” but intended to refer to the period when the defendant ceased occupation of the street in the doing of
I think that the defendant was not excused necessarily from repavement because a witness testified without, contradiction that in order to make a good job of macadamizing “ you have to leave it for good weather,” for such an expression in its full value is not enough to excuse an omission from December 8 to the following June 24, or even from April 9 to that date. I think that the jury was not confused by the subsequent instructions, which may be collated thus: When the defendant had removed the tracks and filled in the space, it lost the right of use and occupation, and the entire and exclusive control of the highway passed to the city, and it was a question for the jury whether the opening was filled in properly so as to be reasonably safe, but unless some duty remained in the defendant, it could not be held liable for a condition which was the result of six months’ wear and tear and the eroding effects of rain. The question now up is not whether the instructions were absolutely correct, but whether they were prejudicial to the defendant.
This other defendant, unlike the railroad company, did not rest upon the plaintiff’s case, but offered certain testimony which was directed to the.physical character of the depression. But this
The jury could have found upon the facts that the city did not fulfill its obligation to see to it that when the railroad company finished its work it left the street in as safe a condition as it found it. Admittedly the railroad company did not up to the time of the accident, months after it had quit the work, attempt to comply with the requirements of the permit issued by the city authorities. (See Hunt v. Mayor, etc., 109 N. Y. 134, 142; Schumacher v. City of New York, 166 id. 103, 109; Godfrey v. City of New York, 104 App. Div. 357; Parks v. City of New York, 111 id. 836; affd., 187 N. Y. 555; Tabor v. City of Buffalo, 136 App. Div. 261; Lobravico v. City of New York, 155 id. 184, 188.) The jury could have found that the city had permitted this depression, which rendered the street unsafe, to-exist without warning or signal of any dangerat this point. (Pettengill v. City of Yonkers, 116 N. Y. 558.) The period as testified to by the plaintiff’s witnesses has been discussed. The police inspector who had charge of the territory, called by this defendant, admits that this condition had continued for days and weeks before the casualty.
The judgment and order should he affirmed, with costs.
Present—Jerks, P. J., Burr, Thomas, Carr and Rich, JJ.
On each appeal judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.