22 N.Y.S. 463 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
The plaintiff was the driver of a wagon for the delivery of beer. On the day of the accident he was out with a load of beer, consisting of some 15 kegs, for the purpose of delivering the same to the customers of his employer. He drove down an alley or street called “ Green Street Alley,” which was crossed diagonally by the tracks of the defendant. Green street alley is about 20 feet in width. The front line of the house on one comer of the alley facing defendant’s tracks is about 9 feet from the nearest track, and the front line of the house on the other comer of the alley, and facing defendant’s tracks, is about 13 feet from the nearest track. As the plaintiff was driving down the alley, an engine of the defendant was backing down the track towards the alley, pulling after it several cars. The engine was moving at a slow rate of speed. There is some conflict of evidence as to the speed at which the plaintiff was driving, but both he and the person upon the wagon with him testify that his horses were upon a walk. The plaintiff testifies that he did not hear or see the engine until his horses were upon the track; that then the cars were so near that he could not get back. He says when he first saw the engine it was about two rods from the crossing. He turned or swung his horses to the right. The tender of the engine being backed down struck the rear end of his wagon, threw the plaintiff out of the wagon, broke his leg in three places, and otherwise bruised and injured him. The only negligence claimed, as I understand it, is that the train man having the train in charge did not give reasonable warning of its approach to the crossing over Green street.
Upon that question the evidence is as follows: Plaintiff’s own evidence on direct examination: “Question. Did you hear any bell? Answer. No, sir. Q. Or any warning whatever ? A. No, sir.” Upon the cross-examination: “Question. You didn’t hear the bell ring? Answer. No, sir. Q. You didn’t hear the whistle blow? A. No, sir.” On the redirect: “Question. Do you know whether or not there was any bell ringing? • Answer. I know there was none ringing. I didn’t hear it ring. Q.
It will be observed that the evidence on the part of the plaintiff to show that no bell was rung is that the witnesses did not hear it; none of them pretended to say “that they listened or gave heed to the presence or absence of that signal.” They were not “looking, watching, or listening for it. Their attention was not directed to the fact. ” In the absence of any affirmative evidence of the fact it would be going a great ways to hold that such evidence was sufficient to prove that no signal was given; but here we have the affirmative testimony of three witnesses swearing positively to the ringing of the bell. There is nothing against their credibility, except that one was the engineer in charge, and the others employes of the defendant,—facts that are not of themselves sufficient to discredit their testimony, but nevertheless facts for the jury to take into consideration where there is any real conflict in the testimony. But here I cannot see that there is any real conflict worthy of the name. It seems to me to come squarely within the principle that, as against affirmative evidence of credible witnesses of the ringing of a bell, there must be something more than the testimony of those who did not hear, and it must appear that their attention was directed to the fact at the time. Culhane v. Railroad Co., 60 N. Y. 133; Dver v. Railroad Co., 71 N. Y. 228; McKeever v. Railroad Co., 88 N. Y. 667.
I doubt very much whether the plaintiff showed affirmatively a lack of contributory negligence on his part. He was traveling over a street with which he was familiar; a narrow street, the buildings upon its corners within a few feet of the railway tracks, where his horses would come upon the tracks almost as soon as the wagon would reach the corner. He knew he was approaching a place of peril; how perilous, from his own testimony, he could not determine by his eyesight until he was almost upon the tracks. Those who approach a place of peril must be on the alert, and vigilant in the use of their eyes and ears, and display that prudence of conduct which the situation dictates. Heaney v. Railroad Co., 112 N. Y. 122, 19 N. E. Rep. 422. • The accident took place in broad daylight, and the circumstances detailed by the plaintiff and his witnesses do not, it seems to me,, show that alertness and prudence of conduct on his part which, when we consider the locality, establish affirmatively the lack of contributory negligence. For these reasons the judgment should be reversed, and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event. All concur.