136 N.Y.S. 696 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
Between five-thirty and six o’clock in the afternoon of March 7, 1910, plaintiff’s intestate, aged between eighteen and ninéeen years, seated on the left side and at the front of a covered baker’s wagon drawn by a tractable single horse which was driven by a companion seated at his right, while proceeding southerly at a walk along a highway near the city limits of Buffalo was killed at the grade crossing of defendant’s northerly or west-bound track and the highway in a collision with defendant’s west-bound passenger train then running at a speed of fifty miles an hour. The wagon seems to have been one of the ordinary, covered, delivery class, the top extending over the seat in the forward end, open in front, and with rigid sides in which were windows at convenient height for observation either to the right or left. The driver, Wadyslaus Klimaszcwski, though injured, still survives the accident. They were both employees of John Kukulka, the owner of the horse and wagon, deceased being Kukulka’s foreman and the driver his deliveryman. Both seem to have been entirely familiar with the place and its surroundings. The day was dark and cold with light flurries of snow and a wind blowing from the west with a velocity of twenty-five to twenty-seven miles an hour. Four witnesses who were near the scene of the accident and observed the progress of the wagon towards
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with.costs.