127 N.Y.S. 292 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1911
This action is one for damages for negligence alleged to have caused personal injuries to the plaintiff. The plaintiff while walking along Spring street on the sidewalk in front of defendant’s premises stepped upon a coal hole cover which gave way under her weight and one of her legs sank down into the opening. In consequence of this occurrence she sustained the injuries complained of.
As to the condition of the coal hole and cover, all the testimony on behalf of the plaintiff is included in these quotations from her own testimony:
“After I had fallen into this coal hole I observed that this hole was a coal hole. Before I fell into the coal hole as I testified this coal hole was covered. As soon as I stepped on the cover it fell to pieces. (Folio 50.) * * * I noticed .the lid or cover of this coal hole before I stepped on it; it was covered. It was a round cover. * * * When. I was going I noticed the cover was there, and the hole was covered up, and I stepped on it. * * * I did not notice if it was cracked or broken.”
There is no. other testimony in the plaintiff’s case bearing upon the condition of the sidewalk or coal hole or cover.
After denial of his motion to dismiss the complaint, defendant produced one La Porta, an employé of a contractor who removed the ashes daily from the defendant’s building. His testimony is uncontroverted. He explains that he left the metal cans' on the side of his truck, and one of them fell onto the coal hole-cover and broke it. He immediately recovered the can from the cover, called out to the plaintiff to look out, but “she paid not attention at all, and went right down.” (Polio 91.) He had been taking ashes in the same way from that place for a year or so.
Daidis, an engineer in the employ of the defendant, testified that he saw the cover that morning about an hour before the accident. It was not broken then, but was solid in its place. He was in the room beneath the coal hole when the cover, broke and a piece of it fell through, and he looked up and saw a girl’s foot through. That occurred about 30 seconds after he had heard something strike the plate. He had stepped on the covers every night before this day to see whether they were in place.
Mainhof, a patrolman on duty from 2 a. m. to 8 a. m. on the morning of the accident testified that he had walked over that sidewalk 20 or 25 times that morning, 5 or 6 times after daylight. He obsérved from visual inspection and by walking over the covers and none of the coal hole covers were cracked or broken.
Cubuzzo, an employe of defendant,' took out the ashes that morning less than two hours before the accident. He says he put the lid on the hole thereafter. It was that way before the accident. It had been there, the same lid, for five years.
Cohen, another witness not connected with defendant, saw the ash can fall from the truck, helped plaintiff out of the hole, and he testifies that before she stepped on the cover it was whole.
The testimony on behalf of the defendant is uncontroverted, and it must be taken as establishing conclusively that the cause of the defect in the cover was not due to any neglect of the defendant, and that no sufficient time elapsed after the cover was broken to enable the
The motion for a new trial should therefore have been granted.
Judgment and order reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event. All concur.