77 N.Y.S. 117 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
This action was brought under a Connecticut statute to recover •damages for negligence which resulted in the death of one Gfeorge Dean. It is alleged in the complaint that the defendant is a foreign corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Connecticut. Dean was a locomotive engineer in the employment of the defendant and while running a freight train on the defendant’s line of railway in the State of Connecticut he was killed in a collision with another freight train.
The accident occurred at about six-forty-eight o’clock on a foggy morning, midway between the stations of Towantic and Osborntown, winch are about three miles apart, Dean being the engineer on the east-bound freight train, known as “ 2nd 232,” from Towantic, and Mott the conductor. The west-bound train from Osborntown was half of the train known as “ 207,” and was in charge of Engineer Hickey. The conductor of 207, Frank, had been left by Hickey with the front half of the train on the siding at Towantic, and at the time of the accident was on the engine with Dean returning to Osborntown to take charge of the second half of 207, which he supposed would remain on the siding there until his arrival, thus allowing 2nd 232 free passage.
Frank’s testimony is that he had arrived with train 207 at Osborntown and attempted to make the upgrade to Towantic, but found it impossible and backed his heavy train to the Osborntown siding and then entered the station where there was no operator so early in the day and telegraphed himself to the general train dispatcher at Hartford of his difficulty and the answer was, “ if I would make arrangements to flag second 232 back to Osborntown by my rear end, that he would give me a meet order on second 232 at Towantic,” and he then received and wrote down the following order from the general train dispatcher :
“ 2nd 232 Eng. 1056 & No. 207 Eng. 1057 will meet at Towantic,” and he gave to his engineer, Hickey, a copy of this order and told him “ he would take our head end to Towantic and flag second 232 back to Osborntown; ” that he did not think Hickey responded but he did not say he would not carry out the order. This is practically the only disputed point in the case, Hickey testifying that -when Frank told him of the plan to flag 2nd 232 to Osborntown after the first half of 207 had been taken to Towantic, he told him he would
The first half of 207 proceeded to Towantic siding and Hickey then ran the engine back to Osborntown. A few moments later Dean’s train, 2nd 232, arrived at Towantic, and the telegraph operator there gave to Dean two orders, one of which was identical with the order Frank and Hickey had received at Osborntown, namely, “ 2nd 232 Eng. 1056 & No. 207 Eng. 1057 will meet at Towantic.” And the other an order that “ 2nd 232 Eng. 1056 Extra 1011 west & No. 211 Eng. 1059 will meet at Meriden Jet.” — the latter place being east of Osborntown. These orders from the general train dispatcher state: “ Conductor and Engineman must each have a copy of this Order,” and duplicates were found upon Dean after the accident which bear signatures purporting to be those of Mott and Dean. Mott testifies, however, that he was not given the orders by the operator and never saw them. Frank testified that he spoke to Dean at Towantic and told him of the plan to flag down to Osborn-town and there pass the other half of 207, and Dean said all right and Frank got on the engine to flag down with him.
Just before Dean pulled out of Towantic, the operator received from the general train dispatcher the following order: “ Release 2nd 232,” and accordingly the block signal was then changed indicating a clear track ahead. This order, apparently, was not given to either Dean or Mott, but the latter says that as the train went out he saw that the block signal was clear. A few minutes later the two trains rushed together in the fog and Dean was killed.
We think that the evidence justifies the conclusion that the accident occurred solely through the neglect of the general train dispatcher in sending the release order by which the block signal was made to indicate a clear track, without having previously sent written orders to both trains that the second half of 207 was to remain at Osborntown until 232 had passed.and been assured that such orders were duly received and understood. Both engineers had been given written orders to meet at Towantic, and Hickey was endeavoring to carry this order out. Dean arrived at Towantic to find a train on the siding and to receive orders to meet a train at
That the defendant is liable for such negligence on the part of its train dispatcher is firmly established, and the rule of law applicable is well expressed in the case of Hankins v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co. (142 N. Y. 416) in the following language : “ If the defendant owed a duty as master to give correct orders to these trains, or at least to take due and reasonable care to give them, the failure to perform that duty is the failure of the master in his character as such, although he intrusted the performance of the duty to the train dispatcher. * * * When the train dispatcher originates and promulgates such orders as were given in this case, he is acting as the master, or, as it is said, his alter ego, and the master is liable for the negligence of the agent he has employed to do his, the master’s, particular work.”
Two objections are taken, however, to the right of the plaintiff to recover. The first relates to the legal capacity of the plaintiff to sue, and it is argued that a public administrator has not capacity as such to maintain an action of this character, as it is in no way connected with any of the objects for which letters of administration are granted to him as an official. It is doubtful if this objection can be considered on this appeal, for the reason that it does not
If, however, the question is properly raised, we do not think it would be fatal to the plaintiff’s right to maintain the action. It will he noticed that there is a marked distinction between the statutes giving the right of action for injuries causing death. By the statute of our State (Code Civ. Proc. § 1902 et seq.) the right is conferred upon an administrator for the benefit of the next of kin, w'hile the statute of Connecticut (Conn. Gen. Stat. [1888] § 1008) reads: “All actions for injury to the person, whether the same do or do not instantaneously or otherwise result in death, * * * shall survive to his executor or administrator.” Under the Connecticut statute, therefore, the recovery would be an asset of the estate of the deceased, precisely as any other claim which he might have at his death. It would be governed by the same rules that would have applied to an action if it had been brought by the deceased in his lifetime and prosecuted to judgment. The claim being, therefore, an asset of the estate, the public administrator could bring the action to recover it.
Although the public administrator has thus legal capacity to sue for such a cause of action, the more serious inquiry is whether our courts will entertain jurisdiction. The accident happened in a foreign State where the deceased resided, and there is authority in favor of the view that the representatives of his estate should be required to enforce their rights in the courts of that State. (Ferguson v. Neilson, 33 N. Y. St. Repr. 814; Burdick v. Freeman, 46 Hun, 138.) Although, therefore, the court has jurisdiction, it could refuse to entertain the action. The court, however, did not so refuse, but proceeded to try the case, and all the reasons ordinarily presented for refusing to retain the action and proceed with it, as that our courts should not be vexed with litigation arising between residents of another State, and that our citizens should not be delayed by actions which should be tried in the courts of another jurisdiction, are wanting where the whole case has been tried and a verdict rendered. We think, therefore, that at this stage of the litigation after judgment entered, the discretion exercised by the court in entertaining the action should not be disturbed.
In regard to the second objection, the defendant being a foreign
To sustain this allegation of the answer, it was shown at the trial that a brother-in-law of the deceased Dean, a few months after Dean’s death, brought from the State of Connecticut into the State of Hew York a watch, the property of Dean, of the value of twenty-five dollars, and he also testified that he was told by an attorney to bring that watch into the State to give foundation for making an application for letters of administration, so that this suit could be brought here, instead of in Connecticut. It is argued from this that the letters of administration were granted under that provision of subdivision 3 of section 2476 of the Code of Civil Procedure which gives to the surrogate of each county exclusive jurisdiction to grant letters of administration where a decedent, not being a resident of the State, died without the State, leaving personal property which has since his death come into “ that county ” and remains unadministered. It is strenuously argued that the record thus shows that the letters of administration were procured by an imposition upon the court; that the parties at whose instance and for whose benefit this action was instituted perpetrated a fraud in procuring a status for a qualified plaintiff to bring this action; that the fraud consisted in concealing from the surrogate the ultimate purpose of the application for letters of administration, there being no occasion for the issuance of such letters for any reason or object connected with the legitimate purposes of administration of an estate. If a fraud were really perpetrated upon the Surrogate’s Court and if the action of the surrogate in granting the letters had been invoked upon allegations that assets of a decedent had come within the county since his death and remained unadministered, and that had been the ground upon which the letters were issued, we would have presented
We have thus proceeded as though the question of fraud or collusion was sufficiently raised by the answer. Here again, however, it is doubtful if allegations that the appointment was “ without jurisdiction, illegal and without authority of law” are equivalent to allegations that the appointment was obtained by fraud or collusion. Excepting these, under section 2473 of the Code of Civil Procedure, where the jurisdiction of a Surrogate’s Court to appoint an administrator is drawn in question collaterally, “the jurisdiction” of that court to make the appointment is conclusively established by an allegation of the jurisdictional facts contained in a written petition “ used in the Surrogate’s Court.”
We think that the judgment and order appealed from must be affirmed, with costs.
Ingraham and Hatch, JJ., concurred ; Yan Brunt, P. J., and McLaughlin, J., dissented.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.