19 N.Y.S. 444 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
The plaintiff’s intestate, Cornelius Mehegan, was killed at a railway crossing on the 20th day of February, 1888, on Michigan street in the city of Buffalo, for which killing this action was brought by the plaintiff in behalf of the next of kin of the deceased. The deceased had in charge a small cart and a dog which assisted in drawing it, and as he was attempting to cross one of the tracks of the defendant’s road he was struck by a car which was backed from the east, and received such injuries as that he soon died therefrom. He was 18 years of age, and entirely familiar with this railway crossing. It is contended by the learned counsel for the appellant that this action has been disposed of by the decision rendered herein by the court of appeals. In the decision of that court in this case (Mehegan v. Railroad Co., 125 N. Y. 768) the opinion of the court is not there printed, but may be-found in 26 N. E. Rep. 936. It is contended, on the other hand, by the learned counsel for the respondent, that new evidence was adduced upon the trial now under review, which takes the case out of the operation of the decision of the court of appeals. It is necessary, therefore, to see, in order toaría ve at a correct conclusion, what facts were before the court of appeals as contained in the record of the other trial, in order to ascertain whether or not the alleged new evidence now offered for the first time modifies in any essential particular the condemnation which the case there received by the opinion pronounced by Judge Earl. The case on the other appeal has been furnished to us, and from it the following facts, in addition to those already stated, appear, and, as summarized by the opinion of the court of appeals, above alluded to, are as follows: A short time before the accident, the engine, drawing seven cars, passed from the west side of the street, on what is-called the “house track,” to the roundhouse, which was at least 600 feet east of the street; and then it was backed upon a switch track, called the “scale track,” which was about 449 feet long, and was, by means of switches, connected at both ends with the house track. Upon the scale track four freight-cars were standing, and the train was backed against them and was coupled to the rear of the seven cars, and then the two rear ears of the four were uncoupled, the purpose being to back them and shunt them across the street, into the yard on the west side. After the four cars were thus coupled, the rear end of the train was about 114 feet from the street. After the deceased came upon the sidewalk, within 29 feet of the northerly rail of the track, he had a plain view, without any obstruction, of the whole of the switch track and of the house track east to the roundhouse, and he also had an unobstructed view of the house track for a considerable distance west of the street. Upon that appeal the contention of the plaintiff was that, as the deceased approached the track, the train was standing just west of the sidewalk, and that it suddenly started back, without any warning to him, just as he stepped upon the track, and thus ran over and killed him. It was upon that theory alone that the counsel sought to maintain in the court of appeals the recovery had in the courts below. The court characterized that theory as “not very-probable, and it can scarcely be conceived that a standing engine could suddenly back eleven cars and give them such momentum that, by moving less than the width of the sidewalk, the near car would come upon the deceased with such rapidity and force that he could not, by the exercise^of ordinary prudence, escape peril. If he had given any attention to the train, he would have seen that it was not, in any proper sense, a stationary train; that there
Judgment and order appealed from reversed, with costs, and a new trial .granted, with costs to abide the event. All concur.