178 A.D. 295 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
Plaintiff has recovered a verdict for personal- injuries sustained at nine-thirty A. M., April 9, 1914, by slipping and falling upon ice upon a sidewalk.
There was evidence from which the jury could find that the icy condition claimed to be dangerous to pedestrians had existed at the place of the accident for at least two weeks.
The jury were instructed that plaintiff could not recover unless the ice on the sidewalk was so dangerous as to be likely to result in an injury to a person using the walk. Also that it was an unusual condition and one that had existed for such a length of time that the city authorities ought to have known about it. That by “ unusual condition ” was meant a condition not ordinarily and generally produced by the winter weather in the locality. Also that the dangerous condition had existed prior to April seventh.
Plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that the ice at the place where she fell was from one to two inches in thickness, very hard, rough and uneven. One witness had slipped upon it four days before and it had impressed others as being dangerous.
The temperature on the seventh was above freezing (thirty-two degrees) after eight a. m. It was raining. On the eighth it alternated above and below freezing during the day until five p. m., when it began falling and reached twenty-three degrees at eleven p. m. and fell rapidly after that, and at six and seven o’clock on the morning of the ninth it was down to twenty degrees, and rose to twenty-four degrees between nine and ten o’clock.
Counsel for the city relies upon this record as showing that the icy condition on the morning of the ninth was produced by the alternate rain, snow, thawing and freezing on the seventh and eighth.
The jury were instructed that if such was the case they must find a verdict in defendant’s favor. The jury has accepted as true the testimony of plaintiff’s witnesses to the effect that hard ice of about the same thickness and rough and uneven condition had covered this walk at the place of the accident for at least two weeks prior to the accident. The city had no witnesses to the contrary, nor did it show that if such condition existed, it was usual in that part of the city at that time.
We cannot say that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence, and we find no erroneous rulings at the trial which require a reversal.
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.