71 N.Y.S. 394 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The defendant appeals from this judgment, and the question is as to the defendant’s negligence.
The plaintiff was a passenger upon a horse car of the defendant’s railway, and she wished to alight at the corner of Seventh avenue and Fifty-ninth street. The plaintiff testified that as the car came1 to this corner it stopped, and her companion, a Mrs.. Spero, alighted from the car first. She was about to help the plaintiff to alight, the plaintiff having one foot off the car and the other on the step,-when the conductor pulled the strap and hurled her back, and that was all she knew until she found herself at home suffering from an injury to her knee. On cross-examination the plaintiff testified that she did not remember that a horse and wagon stopped suddenly
On the part of the defendant there was called a witness who was a passenger upon the car, and he seems to have been an intelligent man, entirely disinterested. lie testified that it was a “ miserable might ” and the streets were wet; that as the car was stopping on the corner of Fifty-ninth street and. Seventh avenue there was a ¡fearful shout from behind that came from the driver of a very large 'covered wagon; that the streets being slippery he had difficulty in stopping his horses; he was pulling with .all his might on the lines ¡and shouting to some one; that it looked as if the pole was going to go over the dashboard of the car and hurt some one, but it did not; that the conductor was standing against, the dashboard when this wagon came'up behind the car; that he had just got upon the car before the accident, when the car was on the east side of Seventh avenue; that there were several passengers on the back platform. 'The witness’ attention was first called by the driver of the truck ¡shouting. He says he saw the wagon, saw the horses being pulled $up, saw the shaft come up in the air, saw the people on the platform move a little bit as if afraid of the shaft; that the wagon was coming •very fast, and that the horses slid some distance as he pulled them ¡up.
Upon this testimony a motion to dismiss the complaint was denied,, to which the defendant excepted, and the question was
This rule has been settled in this State by numerous decisions. It was said in Lewis v. Long Island R. R. Co. (162 N. Y. 61): “ When an emergency presents itself and a person is under great excitement from the presence of an impending peril, he may not act with that perfect judgment that he would under other and different circumstances and still not be negligent. ‘ Railways are not liable for a mistaken exercise of judgment upon the part of their servants * * * to act with the utmost possible promptitude when the circumstances are such as to afford no time for deliberation.’ * * * Where an employee of a railroad company is confronted with a sudden emergency the failure on his part to exercise the best judgment the casa
But even if the evidence would have justified the court in submitting the question of the defendant’s negligence to the jury, there was error in refusing a request to charge. The court charged the jury that the plaintiff was bound to establish two propositions. • The first is “ that this car was negligently started on its way by the conductor, and that from that starting the injury happened to the plaintiff of which slie complains; ” and the second, “ that there was no negligence upon her part which contributed to the injury.” The evidence of the plaintiff' was that her injury was 'caused by the conduc-... tor striking her and pushing her against the car or the dashboard. ' Certainly the jury might well have found from this evidence that she was thrown by the - conductor striking her and pushing her against the car, and not by the starting of the car. The court having thus charged the jury, the defendant requested the court to charge that “ if this accident to the plaintiff was caused by the act of the conductor who was obeying a natural impulse in seeking to escape an actual peril for -which he was in no wise responsible, and a person of ordinary prudence might have acted in the same way under the same circumstances, the defendant was not guilty of negligence and the plaintiff cannot recover.” It cannot be disputed but that that proposition was correct; nor can it be disputed that upon this evidence the jury might have found that the accident was caused by the act of the conductor in striking the plaintiff as he was seeking to escape from the horses or the truck, as described by the plaintiff’s witness. The charge of the court did not cover this request. The learned judge charged that if the conductor started forward and jostled the plaintiff from which the plaintiff was thrown against the body of the car, and if whatever
It follows that the judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J., and O’Brien, J., concurred; Patterson and Laughlin, JJ., dissented.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.