50 N.Y.S. 912 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
Lead Opinion
This verdict should have been set aside on the ground that it was .against the weight of evidence. There is no direct evidence that the defendant’s car ran into the carriage at all. The evidence produced by the plaintiff to prove that’ fact was the testimony of two women who were in the carriage.. One of these women testified that the first that she knew of the accident was “the shock of the trolley car knocking into the carriage. It came from towards the rear; and then we heard the sound of the car going alongside of the carriage for an instant; and then the horses took fright and ran. I saw the trolley car. The trolley car was going the same way the carriage was going. And it came up from behind us. It struck the right side of the carriage. * i:" * It seemed to hit the carriage first, and then it went along the wheel. We could feel the trolley.” The other woman in the carriage testified: “I felt the shock of .the car striking the carriage. The car struck the carriage on the right wheel; the rear wheel. It struck the carriage in the back. The part of the carriage I say it struck was the rear; the rear part of the wheel. Yes, the rear wheel. The right-hand rear wheel.” On the part of the defendant the only passenger in the car testified that he saw the carriage as the car approached, and that the carriage was on the side of the track, and not upon the track. “When I was looking at this coach, it appeared to me to be far enough away from the tracks upon which
The judgment should be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
VAN BRUNT, P. J., and McLAUGHLIN, J., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
The action was brought to recover damages for the death of the plaintiff’s intestate, the result of injuries caused, as is alleged, by reason of the negligence of the defendant’s servants. It appeared that the defendant owned and operated a line of railway in Long Island City, and that on the 30th of June, 1897, the plaintiff’s intestate, Simon McCann, was driving a carriage on Borden avenue, near Bradley avenue, in that
The defendant’s theory of the case was sustained by the motorman, who, being in the employ of the defendant, and thus interested, it was for the jury to judge of his credibility. The testimony of the conductor was manifestly false, whether corruptly or impulsively so we need not inquire. There was but one passenger in the car, and his testimony was very plain to the effect that the carriage was not within the line of the track at all, but that it was, when first observed by this witness, altogether outside of the right-hand track, and that the horses attached to the carriage either swerved or were pulled to the right side, and thus came upon the track; one of the horses, and not the carriage, being struck by the car before the motorman could arrest its speed. But the situation of the car and the carriage was a question for the jury. There was evidence that near the carriage, just immediately preceding the accident, was a heavy truck on the right, such truck being drawn by six or eight horses. There was testimony on the part of the plaintiff’s witnesses that there was also a funeral train of carriages on the other side of the road. It seems that the only way for McCann to pass the eight-horse truck was on the tracks, or to the left of the tracks. The testimony of the motorman is contradictory, and it was for the jury to pass upon his credibility. In one place he distinctly swears that he had been slowing up the car from the time he first saw the carriage,—that is to say,' a block off, —until he struck the horse, slowing up all the time. Then he stated that he did not slow up all the time, but that when he got nearer the carriage he did, and that when it was necessary for him to slow up he did so. He swore positively that the car did not strike the wheel of the carriage, but that it struck one of the horses slightly. He then says in another place, “I only slowed up to the extent of one mile an hour from when I first saw the coach until the time I struck the wheel.” Here was a direct contradiction in this testimony, which the jury doubtless considered. But on all this testimony it was clearly a question for the jury as to what was the position of the carriage with relation to the car, and whether the car struck the carriage, and, if it did, the plaintiff’s theory was established; or whether it struck the horse, and, if it did so strike the horse, and not the carriage, then it would be a reasonable inference that the horses either shied onto the right-hand track or were pulled there by McCann, the plaintiff’s intestate. We think, therefore, that there was evidence to go to the jury on both subjects of negligence and contributory negligence, and the charge of the judge with reference to those matters was correct.
It is contended that there was certain evidence in the case of declarations made by McCann while he was in the hospital as to the cause of the accident, and that such declarations exonerated the defendant’s servant from blame. Williams, an employé of the defendant, testified that the plaintiff herself told him that her ■husband, when she saw him in the hospital, stated that his. horses
Exception was taken to the refusal of the court to charge that there was no affirmative evidence of any care exercised by McCann, or any effort on his part to look" for approaching cars. This request, in substance, was that the court should charge the jury that, as matter of law, the plaintiff’s intestate was bound to look behind him for the possibility of cars running into him from the rear. The court did charge that there was no direct evidence, but that the jury would have to pass upon all the circumstances, and say whether they could find that the deceased exercised the requisite care. That was a proper direction to the jury. The court had charged expressly that if, by the exercise of reasonable care, Mc-Cann could have seen the approaching car, and ought to have apprehended the danger of the situation, he was chargeable with negligence, for he was not at liberty to take even doubtful chances from being too near the track, in the face of danger, and in reliance on the successful attempt of the motorman to slacken the speed of the car. That is as favorable an instruction as the defendant could have required. Nor was it error for the court to refuse to charge as matter of law that, if the jury found that Mc-Cann was driving upon the tracks in such a manner that the car behind him could not pass him without collision, and that Mc-Cann failed to look behind him Occasionally for approaching cars, he was guilty of contributory negligence, and that the plaintiff could not recover. It was for the jury to say, under the circumstances of the case,—and so the court charged,—whether there was any negligence on the part of McCann. Was the situation such as to give rise to any duty to look behind? was the question. In one view of the testimony, it would have been negligence to have looked behind, for he had the funeral procession on one hand and the heavy truck with six or eight horses on the other hand; and according to the testimony of the motorman the truck, carriage, and car were in close proximity at the time of the accident^ and the motorman began to ring his bell, as he says, for the truck, when he was something more than 50 feet away. The real point in the case was as to the situation of the carriage, and what would have been reasonable and careful driving in view of that situation; and upon the whole case, upon the facts, we do not think the verdict
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
O’BRIEN, J., concurs.