69 A.D. 454 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
The plaintiff has recovered a small judgment on the theory of negligence, and the question presented on the appeal is whether, at the time of the occurrence complained of, the defendant owed him the duty of exercising care.
The accident occurred on Sunday, May 27, 1900, in the daytime, on a private lane belonging to Mr. Whitney, at Wheatly Hills, in Nassau county. The lane appears to connect public highways and to be tacitly open to public use. The plaintiff was driving a horse .and surrey, and was accompanied by his daughter and two other ladies. He was engaged at the time as landscape gardener for Mr. Foxliall Keene, and was on his way from the latter’s- place to his own home at Glen Cove, and was using the lane as a shorter route, in accordance with his daily habit during the two years of his employment. The defendant was operating an automobile or motor carriage on the lane in an opposite direction from the plaintiff.
When the automobile was within one hundred or more yards the horse became frightened, and,, before the two vehicles met, the defendant stopped the machine. The plaintiff says- that he shouted to the defendant to stop, and in this he is corroborated by his companions. The defendant says he did not hear the shout, but he did see that the horse was frightened and that he stopped.in .order, to give the plaintiff an opportunity to get out and hold his horse, or do what he might choose. The plaintiff did get out and took his horse by the head,. whereupon, as he claims, the defendant, while the horse was still frightened, snorting, prancing and plunging, started up the machine and attempted to pass, causing the horse to break from the plaintiff’s hold, to overturn and throw out the occupants of the surrey, and to throw the plaintiff down and to inflict • the injuries of which he complains.
The negligence of the defendant, if any, must obviously be predicated -upon- the act of starting the machine, again when the plaintiff was in plain peril. He says, and his companion corroborates him-, that the plaintiff beckoned him to do so. The plaintiff and his witnesses assert that no such sign was given-, and that nothing was said except that at. the time’the horse became fractious the plaintiff shouted: -‘ For God’s, .sake stop that machine and let us get out before you kill us all.” He further testified that immediately after the accident the defendant said: “ I am awful sorry; I ought not - to have started up.” This the defendant, did not deny, except as his story may in itself involve a denial. Under -the circumstances ■the question of negligence, assuming that care was due, was one of fact, and it cannot be said that the conclusion reached by the jury is without support..
But the defendant claims that he owed the plaintiff no duty which was violated, inasmuch as he was a guest or visitor of one lawfully entitled to use the lane, while the plaintiff was at most a mere licensee. The learned trial justice charged the jury that each party had a right to be in the lane; and no exception was taken. Assuming, however, the correctness of the defendant’s premises, the conclusion that no duty of care would follow is not correct. The rule applicable is indicated in the cases cited on his • behalf, and
The rule is, perhaps, more explicitly stated in Walsh v. F. R. R. Co. (145 N. Y. 301), at page 305, viz.: “ The plaintiff was not on the land by invitation of the defendant nor in its business, but for his own purposes, totally disconnected with the defendant’s business. He was not a trespasser in the sense of his being unlawfully "upon the premises, because the defendant, by its course of conduct, had impliedly granted a license to the public to use the land for' the purpose above mentioned. This license, of course, could at any time have been revoked, and then any one going upon the land would have been a trespasser; But, under the circumstances, treating the plaintiff as an adult, and simply upon the question óf the invitation held out to him, he was there by sufferance only. The defendant had no right intentionally to injure him, and it would be liable if it heedlessly or carelessly injured him while performing its own business. It owed him a duty to abstain from injuring him either intentionally or by failing to exercise reasonable care, but it did not owe him the duty of active vigilance to see that he was not injured while upon its land merely by permission" for his own convenience. (Nicholson v. Erie R'way Co., 41 N. Y. 525; Byrne v. Railroad Co., 104 id. 363; Splittorf v. State of New York, 108 id. 205; Cusick v. Adams, 115 id. 55.)”
The doctrine was followed by this court in De Boer v. Brooklyn Wharf Co. (51 App. Div. 289) and is in accordance with the uniform current of authority.
No error was committed at the trial. The court refused to charge
The judgment and order should be affirmed.
All concurred.
■ Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.