43 N.Y.S. 385 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
The purpose of the action was to recover damages for personal ■injuries alleged to have been inflicted on the plaintiff by the negligence of the defendant. The plaintiff was engaged in driving a.
The motorman testified that .when he first saw the wagon it was moving towards the place from which the car was coming, seventy-five or eighty feet distant from him; that he stopped the car at Eleventh street, and that, when he started up the car, the wagon was standing across the track. This evidence of the motorman, that he saw the wagon moving towards him, is in conflict with that of the plaintiff, to the effect that the wagon could not have been seen from the car until it had stopped across the railroad track.. If such was the fact the motorman did not see the wagon until then. Another witness testified that he was on the car; saw the wagon before the car reached it; that after it struck the wagon he was out on the platform; observed that the power was on in full force; that he turned it off, and that he saw no attempt to pull down the trolley
The question whether the pilaintiff was free from contributory negligence, as well as whether the defendant’s negligence was established, was a question of fact for the jury.. The plaintiff was legitimately on the street, seeking to enter into the pilace of his destination. The jury were permitted to find that he had reached the place where the wagon was struck before he could see the approaching car, and that he could not well move from there until the gate was opiened ; that when he saw the car coming he hallooed repeatedly to the motorman, and that he had some reason to supipose that the ■car would he stopped in time to avoid collision. And as the con.clusion is warranted by the evidence that the wagon, standing on the track, could, and, by the exercise of reasonable care would, have been seen from the car in time to have stopiped it before reaching the pilace where- the wagon was, the jury were permitted to find that the injury of the pilaintiff was attributable solely to the negligence ■of the defendant.
There was no error to the prejudice of the defendant in any of the rulings at the trial.
The judgment and order should be affirmed.
All coucurred.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.