76 N.Y.S. 751 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
The appellant contends that the court erred in the theory upon which it sent the issues to the jury as appears particularly from various portions of the charge to which exceptions were taken. Without discussing these various exceptions at length, it is sufficient to say that the question which they present was raised upon the motion made to dismiss, as to whether the precise cause of the derailment of the car not being shown, the jury might infer from the unusual nature of the accident that the defendant was negli. gent. Both plaintiff’s and defendant’s witnesses failed to ascribe the accident to any specific cause, and, against the defendant’s objection and exception, the jury was permitted to and did find that the circumstances existing at the time of the accident warranted the inference of neglience on the part of the defendant. It is now insisted that the record does not contain evidence sufficient to support any such finding.
We are thus brought back to the facts established by the evidence in the case at bar, that the car jumped the track and left the rails at a time when it was going at a “ pretty good rate,” at a place opposite the First avenue car stables, and at a point where there were tracks leading out from the main track into the doors of the stable.
Although it might be said that the evidence is not strong and highly satisfactory in support of the inference of negligence which it was within the province of the jury to draw from the facts set forth, we still think it was sufficient. It is true that the railroad has not a monopoly of that part of the street upon which the rails are laid, nor the right to exclude others from the use thereof, yet it has the paramount right and the exclusive management of its own cars and control for the purpose of laying and keeping in repair its own rails, and the corresponding duty rests upon it of seeing that the cars are properly managed and that the tracks are at all
Upon the main question, therefore, as to whether there was sufficient evidence to warrant the submission to the jury of whether or not the defendant was negligent, we concur in the view taken by the learned trial judge and think that the refusal to dismiss the complaint or direct a verdict for the defendant was proper.
It is only necessary to discuss one of these exceptions which, we, think, is fatal to the judgment. The plaintiff impressed upon the court successfully the view that with the facts which we have enumerated as having been established by the evidence, a prima facie case had been made out and the burden of proof was then shifted and thereafter it rested “ upon the defendant to prove that the accident happened without its fault or neglect.” Upon this appeal the respondent insists that that is a correct proposition of law and refers to several cases in which similar language finds support. It is unnecessary, however, to discuss the question, for, though formerly a debatable one, it has been finally placed at rest in Kay v. Met. St. R'way Co. (163 N. Y. 453), wherein it was said: “ When a party alleges the existence of a fact as the basis of a cause of action or defense, the burden is always upon the party who alleges the fact to establish it by proof. The onus probandi is upon him throughout. In the case at bar the plaintiff made out her cause of action prima facie by the aid of a legal presumption, but when the proof was all in the burden of proof had not shifted, but was still upon the plaintiff.”
For the error in the charge, therefore, the judgment appealed from must be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Patterson, Ingraham, Hatch and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.
Pollock v. Brooklyn & C. T. R. Co. (15 N. Y. Supp. 189).