45 N.Y.S. 4 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
The action is to recover for injuries alleged to have been sustained through the defendant’s negligence. The evidence was clearly sufficient to support the verdict' which the jury rendered for the defendant, and this seems to be conceded. Our attention is called only to alleged errors ini the charge and the admission and exclusion of evidence.
It was charged that “ the omission of the driver to stop the car on the request of the plaintiff would not justify or excuse the act of the plaintiff in attempting to alight from the front platform of the car, while the car was in motion and the horses on a trot, if you find from the evidence that was the fact.” To this the plaintiff excepted: It is claimed that the jury were here instructed that if
The plaintiff’s counsel also asked the court to charge “ that even if the passenger knew there was a rule that he must wait until the car crosses the street, that if the jury believed the driver stopped the car so as to enable him to alight before he crossed, he was justified in getting off.the car.” The court said: “I leave it to you, gentlemen, to say whether, under all the circumstances of the case, it was an act of a prudent man to get off as he did as I have before charged.” The modification was proper. The car might have slowed up, and yet not sufficiently to make it safe for the plaintiff to alight. It was for the jury to say whether, under all the circumstances, his conduct was reasonably careful and prudent.
The car in which the plaintiff was riding was going across town in an easterly direction on East Broadway. One of the plaintiff’s witnesses,, who had a store on. the corner of East Broadway and -Pike street, where tbfe accident occurred, was asked on cross-examination whether car's did not always stop on the east corner of Pike street when proceeding east. This was objected to, the objection overruled and an exception taken. The witness answered in the affirmative. There was also introduced in evidence, over the plaintiff’s exception, an order of the superintendent of police, issued in 1882, directing all drivers of cross-town cars going east to stop at easterly crossings. This evidence was properly admitted. It was the defendant’s contention that the plaintiff attempted to get off .even before the car reached the westerly crossing, and that he gave no notice of his intention. The plaintiff, on the other hand, contended that he asked the conductor to stop at the westerly crossing;
The testimony last above quoted does not depend for its admissibility upon the plaintiff’s; knowledge, or presumed knowdedge, of the custom. That is, in fact, quite immaterial. Whether the-plaintiff knew of the custom or not, he was not justified in trying to-get off of the car if it did not in fact stop, but was proceeding at a. rate of speed which made it dangerous to attempt to alight. This • disposes of an exception taken by the plaintiff -to the refusal to- • charge^ otherwise than liad been already charged, that the plaintiff , was not bound by the rule of the superintendent of police unless he-had knowledge of it. All that was necessary had been already said on the subject, and the request as made was misleading. Whether or not the plaintiff was bound by the rule in question, he was certainly bound not to get off the car while it was proceeding at a dangerous rate. The request tends to indicate that, if the plaintiff had a right to think the car would stop at the near crossing he might try to get off there whether it did or not. So far as this is. not' the tendency of the request, it is entirely irrelevant and immaterial.
At the trial a roundsman and police officer, who were present at. the scene of the accident shortly after it occurred, testified that the. plaintiff admitted that he got off while the car was in motion, and that he alone, was to blame. It also appeared incidentally that the driver was arrested. At the defendant’s request it was charged that the jury were not to consider this fact at all. This amounted to a. refusal, to charge an immediately preceding request of the. plaintiff 5Sj, that the fact was to be considered in determining whether the testimony given as to the plaintiff’s admissions was true. Concededly¿ the evidence was not competent on the issue of the defendant’s negligence, and we do not think it had any legitimate bearing on the particular head pointed out. It was not for the police officers to pass upon the question of who was to blame. It was a proper subject for judicial action.
Van Brunt, P. J., Rumsey, O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ.,. concurred.
Judgment'and order affirmed, with costs.