85 N.Y.S. 807 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
This is an action to recover damages for' personal injuries, in which the complaint was dismissed chiefly on the ground that the evidence established contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff as matter of law.
The plaintiff was struck ánd injured by one of the electric cars of the defendant while endeavoring to cross its tracks in the night
The learned trial judge furthermore declared his inability to perceive how the proof had developed any sort of negligence in the running of the car; but I am also of opinion that there was enough to go to the jury on this branch of the case. The plaintiff’s friend, who was just behind him, testified that the car was going fifteen or twenty miles an hour when it came up and “ shot ” by, and that after striking it went two blocks, or 400 feet, before it stopped. Although the accident occurred at about half-past ten o’clock on a rainy night, it was not very dark where the plaintiff attempted to-cross, Third avenue in that vicinity being lighted by electric lamps. The jury would have been warranted'in finding that the motorman, if' vigilant, could have detected the presence, of ^the plaintiff upon the track in season to avoid running him down, if he had had his-car under proper control. The streets which run into Third avenue, from Sixtieth to Sixty-fifth street, do not cross the avenue; they are described as “ blind streets,” and it is suggested that, as-there was no crosswalk at the place of -the accident, the motorman was. under no obligation to look out for persons crossing the highway there. Nevertheless, the operator of a car along 1,000 -feet of an avenue where there are no cross streets, is chargeable with the knowledge that travelers are very likely to want to pass from one-side of the avenue to the other in that locality and may rightfully do so, and it is incumbent upon him to exercise some care to avoid injuring such travelers. The proof sufficed, I think, to make out a prima facie case of the want of any such care here. It may be that a very different picture will be presented when the defendant puts in its evidence, but, as this record stands, the plaintiff has-proved enough to entitle him to have the issues submitted to a jury.
Goodrich, P. J., Hirschberg, Jenks and Hooker, JJ., concurred.'
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.