52 N.Y.S. 1088 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
'The accident in which the plaintiff was injured was a collision between two trolley cars of the defendant moving in opposite directions. The plaintiff was a passenger in an open car going from the Thirty-fourth Street Ferry, in Long Island City, to the Lutheran
The most important exception in the case relates to the instructions given by the learned trial judge to the jury in' respect to the degree of care which the defendant was bound to exercise under the circumstances. The jury were told that while the defendant did not insure the plaintiff against all hazards, incident to her transportation as a passenger, “ it was required to exercise, through its servants, a very high degree of skill, to see to it that no injury resulted.” At' the conclusion of the charge the counsel for the •defendant took an exception to the foregoing instruction, to the effect that the defendant must exercise a high degree of skill, whereupon the court remarked : “ Care, I meant. I meant care and skill in the operation of its cars.”' It is insisted in behalf of the appellant that the rule, as thus laid down, is in conflict with the recent decision of the Court of Appeals in Stierle v. Union Railway Co. (156 N. Y. 70). There is no doubt that the first opinion in that case did give rise to a very general impression in the legal profession that the rule imposing the highest degree of care upon common carriers for the protection of their passengers had been limited in its application so as to confine it to the maintenance of the roadbed, engines, cars and other appliances of a railway corporation, and that it was not to be applied to the conduct of the agents and servants of the corporation in the operation of the road. That this view of the decision was erroneous, however, has been made plain by the Court of Appeals itself in the opinion delivered upon the motion for a reargument. (50 N. E. Rep. 834.) In this opinion Judge - G-bay expressly declares that the court has not changed any rule of care applicable to carriers- of passengers, and affirms the correctness of the decisions in Maverick v. Eighth Ave. R. R. Co. (36 N. Y. 378)
In the recently decided, case of Piper v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (156 N. Y. 224) the Court of Appeals says: “ Railroad companies are not insurers of the safety of travelers. When they have done all that human skill, prudence and foresight suggest, in the way of precautions and of a safe roadbed, of suitable passenger cars and of such proper mechanical appliances as are required in the operation of a train, they cannot be required to do more.” In this language the learned counsel for the appellant finds further confirmation of his idea that the rule of highest care is no longer to be applied to the operation of a railroad. But the passage quoted must be read in reference to the general subject-matter of the opinion, and so read it cannot be fairly understood as denying or in any' manner questioning the obligation of a railroad- company to exercise the utmost care and prudence to avoid in juring-its passengers by collisions between the cars or trains in which it is transporting them.
The only other point which requires discussion is the proposition that the damages were excessive. According to the evidence introduced in behalf of the plaintiff, she suffered a fracture of the kneecap, a fracture of one of the bones of the heel, and sustained a blow which produced a tumor in the abdominal region from- which a disease of the kidneys has developed. At the time of the trial, about six 'months after the accident, this tumor still existed, and medical testimony was given to the effect that it 'was reasonably certain to be permanent. ■ The court, however, after receiving considerable evidence as to the probable future consequences of the injury, struck it-all out, of its own motion, and instructed the jury that this proof
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.