301 N.Y. 206 | NY | 1950
South Park Avenue in the city of Buffalo is a main east-west thoroughfare which, by means of a viaduct, spans the parallel rights of way of the New York Central and the Erie railroads. The total length of that viaduct including ramps leading up from either end is between 2,000 and 2,500 feet. In the center of the ramps and viaduct is a paved roadway 42 feet wide designed for vehicular traffic. To accommodate pedestrian traffic there is on either side a paved sidewalk raised 6 inches above the surface of the center roadway and separated from it by curbing. At the point where the viaduct is carried over the New York Central right of way by steel bridgework 300 feet in length, the pedestrian lane on either side is separated from the center roadway not only by curbing but also by steel bridgework which serves to protect pedestrians from vehicular traffic moving along the center roadway.
In the month of May, 1945, there came a time when inspection of the South Park Avenue viaduct by representatives of the defendant city revealed that, at a point where the New York Central tracks pass under the viaduct, the under surface of the sidewalk flooring had become so disintegrated — due to fumes and gases emitted by railroad engines — as to be unsafe. The unsafe condition thus discovered caused the defendant city
On the night of June 2, 1945 — twelve days after the pedestrian lanes were closed — the plaintiff, a man fifty-two years of age, was returning to his home walking westerly along the sidewalk on the north side of the viaduct. When he had walked a distance of 1,500 feet along that pedestrian lane he came to the barricade erected 500 feet east of the west end of the structure. There is evidence that, although the plaintiff had recently crossed the bridge in a bus, he did not know the sidewalk was closed at any point until he reached the barricade which blocked the lane in which he was walking. There is also evidence that at that time and place rain was falling and visibility was dimmed by fog or by smoke from a locomotive passing under the bridge. Being unable to proceed further homeward on the sidewalk by which he had reached that point on the viaduct, he turned from the sidewalk into the center roadway where vehicular traffic was passing and where he continued westerly along the north side of that roadway. While pursuing that course he was struck by a westbound automobile — owned by the defendant Oberg and then driven by the defendant Haskell — and sustained the personal injuries which gave rise to this action.
At Trial Term a jury’s verdict awarded damages to the plaintiff against the city, and denied a cause of action by the plaintiff against the individual defendants. At the Appellate Division the judgment entered at Trial Term was reversed on the law and facts and the complaint was dismissed.
Even before the State’s waiver of sovereign immunity by section 8 of the Court of Claims Act (L. 1939, ch. 860) had rendered the defendant city liable, as are individuals and privaté corporations, for wrongs proven to have been done by its officers or employees, “ * * * the city owed to the public the corpo
True it is, as the city now asserts, that when its agents discovered that the sidewalk flooring at a point on the South Park Avenue viaduct had become unsafe, the city had not only the right but the duty to close that unsafe portion to pedestrian traffic as a means temporarily to abate the risk there existing. However, circumstances peculiar to this record pose the question whether the manner in which the city chose to abate one risk did not create another. We consider the question thus posed in the light of the rule which required the city to accomplish the closing of the sidewalk lanes in such a manner as to avoid risk to pedestrians reasonably to be foreseen. (McCrink v. City of New York, 296 N. Y. 99, 106; Palsgraf v. Long Island R. R. Co., 248 N. Y. 339, 344.)
At the time of the accident here involved, although the sidewalk on each side of the viaduct had been closed for twelve
It thus came about that two courses were available to the plaintiff: (1) to retrace his steps back to the first exit from the north sidewalk lane and there map anew his homeward course by such a route as would enable him to avoid the viaduct, or (2) to walk around the end of the barricade and, by proceeding along the north edge of the center roadway, thus by-pass the closed section of the pedestrian lane. The plaintiff chose the shorter, quicker course along the center roadway — indeed the only way at that point which the city had left open on the viaduct for traffic by vehicles or pedestrians.
In view of the conceded fact that both sidewalks for pedestrians had been closed at a point far removed from either end of the viaduct, without warning of such closing until the barricades were reached, and it appearing that the city had left open at that point the center roadway as the only lane on the viaduct for both vehicular and pedestrian traffic, we think it became a question of fact for the jury whether there was thus created by the city a risk — reasonably to be foreseen — that pedestrians would choose, as did the plaintiff, to turn at the barricade into the open way afforded by the center roadway and thus find their way around the closed segment of the sidewalk, rather than to retrace their steps and of necessity reach their destination by a circuitous course which would avoid the viaduct entirely.
At Trial Term that question, and the added question whether, in the circumstances disclosed by the evidence, plaintiff’s con- , duct amounted to contributory negligence, were submitted to
Accordingly, the judgments should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
Loughran, Ch. J., Conway, Desmond, Dye, Fuld and Froessel, JJ., concur.
Judgment accordingly.