71 N.Y.S. 616 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.
The Solvay Process Company operated extensive works about two miles west of the city of Syracuse, on the line of the Auburn branch of the defendant’s road. Passing the works on the south the defendant had its main or passenger track, and north of this and adjacent ■to the Solvay works it had three sidings, used exclusively for the benefit of those works.
The Solvay Process Company had its own engines and crews ■ of men to operate them, and had more or less sidings north of defendant’s tracks and within its own premises, which it used in connection with its business. The deceased was one of the Solvay Process works employees, a bralternan, working in one of the engine crews. On the night of the accident the deceased was to commence work at six o’clock. His body was found between the main or passenger track and first siding to the north of it, a little before six o’clock, and just after the passenger train, leaving the Syracuse station at five o’clock and thirty-five minutes, passed by the Solvay Process works. It was claimed by the plaintiff that his death, resulted from his being hit upon the head by a large piece of coal, falling from the tender of the engine drawing such passenger train. No one saw the accident, and the manner in which the death was caused was a matter of inference from circumstances alleged to have been proven at the trial. The place where the accident occurred was iqoon the defendant’s land and by the side of its passenger track. The public generally had no business there. The employees of the Solvay Process Company had a right to be there, while engaged in performing their duties for that company. Whether the deceased was so engaged at the time he was killed was a question in controversy upon the trial and which was submitted to the jury. The evidence, to say the-least, was very meager to support plaintiff’s claim that the deceased was properly there and performing ■ his master’s duty. The jury found for the plaintiff' upon the issue, however. It was necessary they should so find in order to render a verdict for the-plaintiff as the court charged them. It was also essential that the plaintiff should sIioav the mann'er in which the death was caused in order to obtain a verdict in her favor. The death must be traced
“ The mere fact that the accident happened, if you find it happened as the plaintiff claims; the mere fact, if you so find, that a piece of coal fell from this passenger train and killed McConnell is not in itself evidence of any negligence whatever on the part of the railroad company. You must specifically find, apart from and excluding that consideration, that the railroad company was negligent in some way, and that that negligence caused the death of McConnell.
“ The sole claim of negligence made by the plaintiff is that the coal upon this engine was improperly piled, and that because of such improper piling this particular piece in question fell from the tender and struck McConnell, killing him. The question I submit to you. The evidence upon that is brief. Two of the witnesses, the motorman and the conductor, state that they saw the tender; that it was piled with coal of irregular sizes, and that it was rounded up from the edges and raised in the center about six inches above the edge of the tender. If that you find to be the fact there can hardly be any claim that the tender was improperly loaded or that the defendant was negligent in any way in that regard. The witness Mitchell states, however, that he also saw the tender as it passed on the night in question, and that in the center the coal was rounded up as the other witnesses have described, but rounded up to a height of about three feet above the edges. As I say, if you find that the evidence given by the motorman and the conductor is true, you cannot make any finding of negligence in this case based upon the way in which that tender was loaded, and as that is the
This was a very clear statement of the question of negligence submitted to the jury, and under this charge the jury found for the plaintiff. The two witnesses who testified to the coal being piled up but a few inches above the edge of the tender were not employees of the defendant. They were disinterested witnesses and were called and examined by the plaintiff on this subject. The next morning the witness Mitchell, who had been examined the day before, was put back upon the stand and gave the evidence upon--"Inch the jury based their verdict- The plaintiff had entirely failed to prove by its two witnesses, Felt and McArdle, employees of the street railroad company, any negligence to base a recovery upon. Mitchell was a co-employee of the deceased with the Solvay Process Company. He was inteiwiewed during the night by the plaintiff’s counsel and was called back to the stand in the morning and gave the evidence which alone carried the case past .the court and. to the jury. While the evidence, however unsatisfactory, may have been sufficient to carry the case to the jury, under the case of McDonald v. Met. St. Railway Co. (167 N. Y. 66), recently decided by the Court of Appeals (notwithstanding the former decisions of that court, Linkhauf v. Lombard [137 id. 417] ; Hemmens v. Nelson [138 id. 517] ; Laidlaw v. Sage [158 id. 73, 96]), we think the evidence was not sufficient to hold the verdict upon'the motion for a
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
All concurred.
Judgment and order reversed upon questions of fact, and new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.