29 N.Y.S. 650 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
In the evening of December 9, 1892, the plaintiff’s buggy in which he was riding, on Vandervoort street, in the village of North Tonawanda, was overturned, and he was thrown out and injured. He charges that his injury was caused by the negligence of the defendant. The occasion of the accident was an excavation made in the street by the Tonawanda Street-Railroad Company, which was proceeding to construct its road in that street. For that purpose the company, on the day of the injury, had excavated a place for its location there. The plaintiff, not being aware or advised of the situation, drove into the excavation, causing the injury. It was dark, and the evidence on the part of the plaintiff tends to prove that there were no barriers or lights, other than the electric lights at some distance from the place in question to warn him of the danger. Upon the subject of lights, there was a conflict in the evidence. Witnesses on the part of the defendant testified that there was a red light at the intersection of Thompson and Vandervoort streets, where the plaintiff turned from the former into the latter, and another south on Vandervoort street. The question whether or not such lights were there was one of fact for the jury.