83 N.Y.S. 339 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
■ The action is to recover for the death of plaintiff’s husband, alleged to have resulted from his being struck with a brick, which, through defendants’ negligence, fell from a building in course of construction. Upon the former appeal (Koch v. Fox, 71 App. Div. 288) the facts were set forth and discusséd at length.
The theory then. presented, that the plaintiff’s intestate was by his injuries made insane, and while suffering from insanity jumped into the East river, and as a consequence of the wetting contracted lobar pneumonia, to which his death was primarily ascribed by the physicians who then attended him, is no longer in the case, such, theory being abandoned by the plaintiff and no proof thereof offered. It is true that here, as on the former trial, the plaintiff testified that after being injured by the brick on July 10, 1899, her husband was unconscious and in great pain, and though two weeks later he got better and in fact subsequently visited Mt. Vernon, returning about the middle of September, he still complained of his head and made strange remarks, and was restless and could not sleep, and early in the morning of September fifteenth (the day on which he was subsequently taken from the river) he resisted her efforts to detain him and ran from the house. And the physician who, prior to that time, had attended him testified again that the deceased had been in a state of coma, and his. injuries would tend to cause him to have impulses of an abnormal nature, to be irritable, melancholy and irrational, and that the headache of which he complained would indicate meningitis, and that he considered the injuries
Upon the present record it appears from the testimony of the plaintiff’s experts that Koch, as-the result of being struck on the head by the brick, received an injury so severe and serious as in all probability to have finally caused his death in and of itself. After -being taken from the river Koch was conveyed to a hospital, where, •he was treated by the physicians for acute lobar pneumonia, which developed, and where, on October 4, 1899, he died. After inquiries made as to his previous habits and life, the physicians ascribed his death primarily to lobar pneumonia, and, secondly, to alcoholism; They testify that he gave signs of having suffered from some previ- ' ous injury, and admitted that from his weakened condition he was more susceptible to pneumonia^ which was likely to result from the ■wetting and exposure, and might have entered his system at that -time. In this connection it-will- be noted that the doctor who had •attended him immediately after the injury received from the brick testified that he found no indications of pneumonia.
We may, with the appellant, assume that the evidence was sufficient to warrant -the finding of the jury that the intestate was struck on the head by a falling brick, through the negligence, of the appellant’s employees, and that the intestate was himself free from contributory negligence. This leaves,' as the principal question on this appeal, the determination of whether or not the cause of the death of the plaintiff’s husband was so connected with the injuries as to justify an action by her as his administratrix under the statute. Differently stated, we are to determine whether the in jury sustained on July 10, 1899, was the sole cause of his death on October 4,1899, -or whether there was a new and intervening cause.
The plaintiff’s theory was that the death of Koch was the necessary and proximate result of the injuries to his head, irrespective-of
Assuming that the injury from the brick would have been sufficient eventually to cause death, the plaintiff, we think, failed to prove that the intestate died as the result thereof. On the contrary, it appears that the man died from pneumonia and alcoholism, or at least a verdict to the contrary would be, in our opinion, against the weight of evidence. It is true that the pneumonia might not have been fatal were it not for .the weakened physical condition of Koch due to the injuries which he received from the brick. It does not here appear, however, that the pneumonia was induced and caused by the original injury. It was ascribed to the immersion, and it was not shown that the immersion followed from or was the result of the primal injury. As stated, the theory of insanity, has been abandoned, and what was said on the former appeal appears even more clearly now, that the intestate “ may have fallen into the water through his own carelessness and he may have jumped in.through fright or an error of judgment, or to avoid apprehended danger as well as from other motives, while mentally responsible within the rules stated; and in either case manifestly the appellant would not be liable for the consequences.”
In Seifter v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co. (169 N. Y. 254), an action brought to recover for death alleged to have resulted from septic pneumonia caused by a fracture, a Verdict for plaintiff was was reversed also upon the ground that the evidence failed to show
In the case at bar it was not septic but lobar pneumonia to which the death of the intestate was in part ascribed by the physicians and it was testified that this was induced by the wetting or immersion that he had undergone. At this point, however, the proof fails entirely in establishing a chain of events extending from -the accident to the death, for the immersion was not connected with the accident, the claim that insanity, caused by the accident, led to the immersion, being abandoned. The record, therefore, fails to sustain ■the plaintiff’s recovery on this ground and we are left simply to the testimony as to the cause of the death. On this subject it is true that the plaintiff’s physician testified that he attributed the death to the injury to the head, but this is opposed by all the other testimony, which is to the effect that the deceased died of pneumonia. The preponderance of the evidence being, therefore, greatly in favor of defendants as tending to show that death was caused by pneumonia, which latter was not connected with the physical injury, the verdict in favor of plaintiff was clearly against the weight of evidence.
Van Brunt, P. J., Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred ; Hatch, J., dissented.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.