109 N.Y.S. 519 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
This is an appeal by both defendants from a judgment for plaintiff upon a verdict in his favor in an action for personal injuries, and from an order denying a motion to set aside the verdict and for a new trial.
The defendant construction company was engaged, and had been for some time engaged, in constructing a subway through Forty-second street in the city of Mew York under what is known as the Bapid Transit Act (Laws of 1891, chap. 4, as amd.). The accident occurred on December 12,1902, at about half-past five o’clock in the evening, when it had grown fairly dark. The subway ran through Forty-second street from Fourth avenue to Broadway and consisted of a tunnel constructed in what is known as an open cut. The surface of the street had been opened, an excavation made to the necessary depth, the tunnel built, the excavation filled up and surface replaced. This work had been going on for a long while, and the street had been in a greatly disturbed condition. At the time of the accident the work immediately west of Sixth avenue had been nearly completed, and the surface of the street restored except for a narrow trench which had necessarily been left open for the completion of the work. There was a double line of car tracks on Forty-second street, and this trench ran between the two lines of track. The cars as they passed extended outside the tracks so'as to partly cover the trench, so that it was impracticable to rail it off without com
The moment plaintiff had passed the end of the car he fell into the trench, which he had not observed, and received the somewhat serious injuries for which he has recovered. The point at which he fell .was not more than five or six feet from the easterly end of the open trench, and it was clearly shown that the defendant construe
It is probably not very-important, so far as concerns this action, how far apart they were, because from the condition of the traffic it is doubtful whether plaintiff would- have observed the lights to the westward however near they might have been together. There was no direct evidence as to how long the trench had been in this condition, but it could perhaps be inferred that, being the last of a long-continued excavation, it or a wider trench had been open for .a considerable time. The defendant construction company was engaged upon a lawful work, and the keeping of the trench open was a necessary part of its work. . It was not, therefore, a nuisance, although it was a dangerous obstruction. Its duty, was to use reasonable care to so guard the excavation as to warn persons using the highway.
From the nature of the case it could-not surround the excavation with a fence, for that would have been to stop all vehicular traffic. It did adopt the precaution which experience has shown to he usually sufficient, to wit, marking the opening with red lights and stationing a watchman to warn vehicles and pedestrians. In determining what precautions it would be reasonable to- adopt,"the construction company was entitled .to take into consideration the location of the construction, some thirty feet away from the usual and customary'crossing. It is true that the plaintiff or any one else had the right to cross a street at any point, but the question the construction company had to determine was not what rights pedestrians had in the highway, but how they would probably exercise these rights. ' (Derby v. Degnon-McLean Contracting Co., 112 App. Div. 324.) The defendants were not bound to and could not reasonably have been expected to so guard the trench as to insure the safety of every heedless foot passenger who sought to cross the street at an unusual and unaccustomed place and under conditions which would render all precautions, short of actual barriers, futile and ineffective. There is even less reason for holding the city of New York liable than for holding the contractor. It is unnecessary to discuss the
Patterson, P. J., McLaughlin, Laughlin and Houghton, JJ., ' concurred.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.