65 N.Y.S. 894 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
As the principal question presented on this appeal is whether the verdict of $2,750 in plaintiffs favor, rendered after trial of the issues, is sustained by the evidence, it is necessary to refer in brief to the testimony. The action was brought to recover damages for injuries which the plaintiff sustained by a fall down the stairway of defendants’ tenement house, 521 West Forty-eighth street, in the latter part of the afternoon of October 20, 1897, occasioned, as alleged, by their negligence in failing to keep the stair carpeting in proper repair and the hallway sufficiently lighted. The stairs were covered with oil cloth and on each stair was a rubber pad, both of which, it is said, contributed to the accident by their worn condition. Gas jets were provided on each landing, but were not lit at the time of the accident, and it was expected that sufficient light would enter the hallway during the day from a skylight above" the stairway in the roof and through opaque glass doors and windows entering into the apartments. The skylight was built so that beside two end vertical windows, each measuring about two by three feet, there was an inclined overlapping glass measuring about six feet by three and a half feet. The total width of the hallway was five feet eight and a half inches, the stairway measuring two feet eight inches, and the opening through the floors being five inches wide and eleven feet ten inches long. The tenement house was five stories high with four families on each floor, and the plaintiff, at the time of the accident, lived in one of the front apartments on the third floor, and it was down the stairs leading from the third to the second floor or story that she fell.
Her testimony is that she left her apartment at a little before six in the afternoon and went to see Mrs. Whalen, who lived on the
Dr. Byrne testified that he was called to see the plaintiff at the time of the accident, reaching there about six o’clock, and there was then no gas lit in the hall and it was so dark there that he could not recognize any one; that Mrs. Lendle was severely injured by the fall, having suffered a scalp wound, two fractured ribs, one of -which penetrated the chest wall, and other contusions; was under his treatment till February, 1898, and some of the effects of her injuries will be permanent. The doctor identified a piece of oil cloth shown in court by the plaintiff as that which he had seen on the top step of the third floor the day of the accident, as he remembered the torn and worn places.
Other evidence was given as to the precise time the accident occurred, whether or not it was dark in the daytime in the hallway and whether the oil cloth and rubber pad were worn; and upon each of these points the testimony was conflicting. In corroboration of the testimony given by the plaintiff and Dr. Byrne, there is that of the plaintiff’s husband, her son, her daughter and her son-in-law, who say the accident occurred near six o’clock, and that it was so dark in the hall in the daytime that persons could, not be recognized, and assert that the worn carpeting shown in court by plaintiff was taken from the top step soon after the accident and carefully preserved for the trial. On the other hand, the defendants’ witnesses, who were tenants in the building or related to or employed by defendants, state as positively an opposite version. They invari
Thus we have sufficient conflicting evidence to render it necessary to submit the issues to the jury. Nor can we find, as matter of law, taking the plaintiff’s statement as true, that she was guilty of contributory negligence. She says she walked -slowly along the dark hallway to go down stairs to mail a letter and reached out for
The question of defendants’ negligence was also one for the jury, and upon the evidence they might justly have found either that the carpeting was worn or that the hall was not safe because there were no adequate windows or artificial means of lighting provided. It is admitted that the gas was not lit at the time of the accident and there was evidence that not much light could pass down to the third floor through the five-inch space from the skylight on the roof above the fifth floor, which was the only exterior opening.
The construction given the statute of 1895 (Chap. 567, § 9, amdg. Laws of 1882, chap. 410, § 663), introduced in evidence, which relates to the lighting of hallways in tenement houses, was, we think, as fair and liberal to defendants as they were entitled to receive, although on this appeal much fault is found with it. The law provides that “ The owner or lessee of every tenement or lodging-house in the city of New York shall keep a light burning in the hallway upon each floor of said house from sunset until ten p. m. throughout the year. In every tenement house in the said city in which there is a hallway or hallways with no window opening from such hallway outside of said house, a light shall be maintained by said owner or lessee in each such hallway between the hours of eight a. m. and ten p. m. of each day, unless said hallway shall be otherwise sufficiently lighted.”
The purpose of the act of 1895 was to secure sufficient lighting in each hallway of a tenement house both by day and by night, and
The trial justice, therefore, did not determine, as matter of law, that there were no openings in the hallway to the outside, or that the skylight was insufficient, but, assuming the accident occurred before sunset, he left it as a question of fact for the jury to determine whether there was any light received from windows in the hallway opening on the outside or sufficient light from the skylight. He refused, it is true, to hold that the skylight was an opening from the hallway to the outside, and most of the fault which the appellants find is with this ruling which it is insisted is incorrect. What in effect the learned trial judge held was that although a skylight might be an opening on the roof to the outside, in its general acceptation it was not an opening to the outside from the hallway on the third floor.
It may be that in the construction of certain houses and even tenements, all the space in the center of the building used for passageways from the front door to the roof could be correctly described as a hallway, and a skylight or dome on the top might be said to be an opening to the outside from such hallway. It will be noticed, however, as already pointed out, that the act of 1895 itself says that after sunset light shall be provided “in the hallway upon each floor ” of the house, and a fair construction, therefore, of the provisions relating to the daytime, wherein mention is made of openings in the hallway to the outside, would be that the statute refers
Another exception was taken to the introduction of an almanac for the purpose of showing the time of sunset on the day of the accident. An almanac from an unofficial source, and not properly verified, is not, strictly speaking, competent evidence; but receiving it as an aid to the memory of the court and jury is not reversible error. It was entirely proper for the court, without evidence, to take judicial notice of the time of sunset on the day of the accident, and for the purpose of refreshing the mind of the court there was no legal objection to consulting an almanac. In Hunter v. N. Y., O. & W. R. R. Co. (116 N. Y. 615) it is said: “ Thus, it has been held that courts will take judicial notice * * * of the time of the rising and setting of the sun and moon, and generally of those things which happen according to the ordinary course of nature; the course of time and the movements of the heavenly bodies; the coincidence of the days of the week with the days of the month.” And in Case v. Perew (46 Hun, 62) it was said : “ The almanac was not competent evidence as such to prove when the moon rose on that or any day ; but if the statement on the subject in it was correct the defendant could not have been prejudiced by it. Judicial notice will be taken of the time the moon rises and sets on the several days of the year as well as of the succession of the seasons, the difference of time in different longitudes, and the constant and invariable course of nature. It may be assumed that the court, treating the almanac as correctly stating the time when the moon rose on the day in question, received it in evidence to refresh the memory of the jury on the subject. And in that view we think it was competent.” In the present case the almanac was expressly offered and received “ for the purpose of refreshing the mind of the court and the jury,” and we think, therefore, there was no error committed.
We have thus with some detail referred to the evidence relating to the two theories upon which it was sought to establish the defendant’s negligence (namely, in maintaining for an unreasonable time a defective pad on the top step or landing, and in failing to properly light the hallway, as required by statute), for the purpose of deter
The judgment appealed from should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Ingraham, McLaughlin and Hatch, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.