104 N.Y.S. 916 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1907
The action is for personal injuries. Plaintiff was a passenger on defendant’s car. Plaintiff’s version of the accident is as follows, viz.: When the defend-, ant’s car had come to a full stop at the south crossing of Eighty-second street and Columbus avenue, in response to plaintiff’s signal to the conductor to stop the car, plaintiff started to get off said car from the back platform; but, before he had had time to do so, and while he had one foot on the bottom step and was in the very act of getting off, the conductor rang the bell from the back platform, the car started up and threw the plaintiff into the street, thereby causing the injuries complained of. He is corroborated by his sister, who was with him. The jury allowed plaintiff $550 damages. Defendant appeals. The defendant’s theory of the case, as shown by its evidence, is that plaintiff was injured while attempting to alight from a moving car after it had started up from the south side of Eighty-second street and Columbus avenue, where it had stopped to let plaintiff’s sister get off. The conductor was not called as a witness; but defendant’s investigator, who had, apparently, charge of subpoenaing witnesses for defendant, states in detail the unsuccessful efforts which he made to find the said conductor. The court, on the subject of the absence of this conductor from the trial, instructed the jury as follows: “In this case the conductor is not produced as a witness. The defendant, however, has shown by a witness what endeavors it has made to procure the conductor, and it is for you to say from the evidence whether such efforts were reasonable or not; because, if you find from the evidence that no reasonable
Fitzgerald, J., concurs in result; Goff, J., concurs.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.