32 N.Y.S. 459 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
The action was brought to recover damages for an injury to plaintiff resulting from defendant’s alleged negligence. Plaintiff claimed that on April 14,1891, while she was passing along one of the public streets of the city of Cohoes, a box of goods was negligently pushed out of a door of defendant’s mill by its servants upon the sidewalk and injured plaintiff, who was then lawfully passing along the street. The principal question between the parties on the trial was as to whether plaintiff was injured by the box as it was shoved out of defendant’s mill or by the tailboard of the truck standing in front of the building to receive said box. It is not claimed that defendant was liable for any negligence on the part of Simmons, the driver of the truck. He was an employé of Thompson & Hildreth, contractors in the work of removing goods from defendant’s premises to the Citizens’ Line Steamboat Company. Simmons was not an agent or servant of defendant, but represented independent contractors. We will not undertake to discuss the evidence produced on the trial by the parties. After carefully considering it, we are of the opinion that whether defendant’s servants were negligent in shoving the box of goods into the street in the manner they did, whether plaintiff was struck and injured by the box, and whether plaintiff’s negligence did or did not contribute to the injury, were all questions of fact, which the trial court properly submitted to the jury, and as to which the verdict is conclusive. Nor, under the circumstances of the case, can the damages awarded to the plaintiff be regarded as excessive. We should there
We also doubt the correctness of the following instruction to the jury:
“If you find the wagon was standing, as is claimed on the part of the defense, backed up against the building, and this plaintiff attempted to crawl through or to go through there when the end board was up within three inches of the building, and hit the end board, then it is a question for you to determine whether she was guilty of negligence or not, taking in consideration her age. If she were an adult, had been at the time, and attempted to pass through such a place, I should charge you as matter of law it was negligence, and gross negligence, and if she got injured she ought to suffer the consequences. I will leave that question with you to determine whether this girl, being ten years and a half, or a little older, at the time,—whether she was guilty of negligence if she attempted to pass through there, when the truck was standing within three inches or up against the building, or not.”
Although plaintiff was only 10-3,- years old, if she attempted to pass defendant’s building when the truck was only three inches from it, and under the circumstances stated in the charge, we doubt whether, as matter of law, she was not guilty of contributory negligence. See Wendell v. Railroad Co., 91 N. Y. 420. But, as there should be a new trial for the reason above stated, we will not consider this question, as well as other questions raised on the appeal. Judgment reversed, new trial granted, costs to abide the event. All concur.