46 N.Y.S. 321 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
This action is to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant. The defendant maintains a trolley railroad line on Third avenue in the city of Kew York. .The occurrence which is the subject of the action happened about two o’clock on the night of June 4, 1893. The plaintiff was standing at or near the corner of Third avenue and the Boulevard, when one of - the span wires that support the trolley wires of defendant’s railroad broke. The wire swung to the sidewalk, where plaintiff was standing, the broken end striking his hat; the wire burned through-the brim of his hat and came in contact with one of his eyes, he thereupon falling unconscious. The eye was destroyed, and the evidence tended to show that the plaintiff’s brain and faculties were, seriously • impaired. At the scene of this occurrence an electric light company maintains a circuit of lights and wires. The electric light wires had been strung before the defendant’s railroad was constructed, and , these wires came' in close proximity with the span wires of the railroad!
We think the case was properly one for the jury. A large portion of the appellant’s brief is devoted to the argument that, at the close of the plaintiff’s case, the defendant’s ownership of the wire which- broke and injured the plaintiff had not been established, and that no case had been made out to which the defendant was called upon to respond. This is of no importance, -for it appeared by the defendant’s evidence, without dispute, that the wire -which broke and caused- the injury was its span wire. When the defendant enters into its proof, the question never is, whether the plaintiff’s evidence is sufficient to justify the submission of the case to the jury, but whether, on the whole case, there is a question of fact as to the defendant’s liability. If, at the close of a plaintiff’s case, the
At the close of the testimony the case stood substantially in thia position : It was undisputed that the defendant's span wire broke and, falling, struck the plaintiff’s eye, destroying it. When thia fact appeared, we think that the doctrine res ipsa loquitur applied, and that there was a presumption of negligence on the defendant’s, part which it was called upon to explain or rebut. This proposition the defendant vigorously assails, but we do not see why the rule, does not* apply. The res in this case was not the electric current» but the breaking of the defendant’s wire. It was the wire that inflicted the injury. No matter how intense the electric current,, had the wire not broken and fallen on the plaintiff no injury could, have happened him. Nor is the rule inapplicable because the plaintiff was not a passenger of the defendant, but a mere third party, to whom it owed only the duty of ordinary care. The leading case in this State on the subject, that of Mullen v. St. John (57 N. Y. 567), occurred between parties between whom there was no contractual relation. A building fell or collapsed and injured a traveler on the highway. It was held to be incumbent on the defendant to show that the building fell without fault on his part. The. principle has been twice applied by us within the last few months. In Gilmore v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co. (6 App. Div. 117). the plaintiff, when entering the car and on the platform, was struck by the brake handle, which was suddenly set free in some unexplained manner. It was held that the occurrence called for explanation, and that a nonsuit was erroneous. In Clarke v. Nassau Electric R. R. Co. (9 App. Div. 51) the plaintiff’s horse, while crossing the rails of defendant’s railroad, was killed by an electric, shock from some source. The defendant operated its road by electricity It was there said by Justice Bartlett: “The plaintiff, oi-any other traveler suffering a similar misadventure, could have no-means of ascertaining the precise state of the defendant’s plant in respect to insulation, or in respect -to contact with other sources of electrical energy. The fact that the defendant brought electricity
The defendant’s evidence was to the effect that the span wire in ■question, a No. 4 gauge, galvanized steel wire, was of the kind usually employed at the time for such purpose in the construction ■of trolley roads. It appears that the more recent practice is to substitute for a single wire a braided" wire or wire composed of several strands; but even the plaintiff’s experts, while criticising the use. ■of the single wire, concede that, at the time of the accident, the use of such a wire was as common as that of the braided wire. The identity of the particular wire seems to. have been conceded. "We think, therefore, that the defendant could not be charged with negligence in using wire of an improper character. The testimony of the defendant’s lineman showed that the broken end was, as he termed it, “ drawn to a pencil point.” Now, if this was the condition of the wire when it was originally put up, or the wire had been worn to that size by ordinary úse, I think the jury could have found that there was negligence either in stringing or maintaining a wire with such a defect. If the condition of the wire was caused by something extraordinary happening at the time, or immediately before the wire broke, it plainly proceeded from electrical causes. If this theory be correct, then a current was communicated to the span
The evidence of the lineman was that the wire broke some six feet beyond the insulator which carried the trolley wire. From this fact I should think it probable that the current did not proceed from the trolley wire, though if it did it would be for the defendant to explain why the trolley wire was not resting on the insulator. If the current did not proceed from the trolley wire it must have come from the electric light wire, and it now remains for us to consider whether, assuming that this was the cause of the breaking of the span wire, the jury could hold the defendant responsible for' it. The electric light wires were strung on the street before the trolley wires. Presumably, they were lawfully strung there. The defendant owed the duty of constructing its plant on the street in a manner reasonably safe and secure so far as the public who might use the street were concerned. It is evident from the testimony (if indeed , it is not a matter of common knowledge of which we may take notice) that the great danger in highways from the presence of numerous wires, some of them. carrying electric currents of high intensity, is that those wires may come in contact, and a wire designed either to .carry no current, or transmit one of but slight
From this I'think it fairly might have been claimed before the jury that it was dangerous to string the span wires too close to the electric light wires, at least without taking particular precautions against the danger of the light wire coming in contact with the span wire. The defendant’s lineman testifies that when he inspected the wires on the afternoon before the accident, the electric light wire was, as far as he could judge, about two inches from the span wire. It was the duty of the defendant not only to construct, but to maintain its plant reasonably safe and secure for the public. And, whether the wires were originally strung so- close together, or whether the light wire had fallen or sagged towards the span wire, it was a question of fact whether the defendant should not have anticipated danger from the close proximity of the wires and have taken measures to guard against that danger. We have thus discussed at much length the facts of the case in answer to the elaborate argument of the defendant that there was no sufficient evidence upon which its negligence could be predicated.. We do not say. that the two conclusions w-e have stated should be found from the evidence. We merely.say that the' jury could have found them from the evidence, and that is sufficient to answer the motion of a nonsuit.
We are, however, of opinion that there were errors in the charge-of the learned trial judge which require a reversal of this" judgment. Substantially at the close of the charge the trial judge said :. “ In the absence of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff the defendant is liable for any injury sustained by the plaintiff as a result of the accident under consideration, provided the breaking of the wire can be attributed to the want of reasonable care on the part of the defendant. In the ordinary course of things
The second proposition, substantially the rule of res ipsa loquitur, as xve have already stated, is correct.
The third proposition is: “ When the plaintiff rested, the burden was upon the defendant of showing such facts as warrant the conclusion that the accident was due to circumstances which the exercise of ordinary care could not foresee and guard against. Has the defendant met this obligation ? If it has, your verdict must be for the defendant.” If the fair interpretation of this instruction was only that
All concurred.
Judgment and order. reversed and a new trial granted, costs to bide the event.