10 N.Y.S. 97 | New York City Court | 1890
The plaintiff was injured on the evening of January 9, 1889, while walking on the sidewalk of Edatbush avenue, near Third, in this city. A fence in front of the premises owned by defendant as trustee fell or was blown upon plaintiff by the wind, whereby he sustained bodily injuries. A verdict at the trial term was rendered in his favor for the sum of $500. The plaintiff was the only witness in his behalf, who testified as to the condition of the fence prior to the evening in question. He said that he observed the fence very often before the accident, and that sometimes, when there was a strong wind, he saw it “like shaking, ” but that he did not think that it would tumble down; that, before he was injured, he heard a sound like an explosion,—something like a shock. The hea.vens were a light red, and the wind made a loud, roaring noise, and that he was “a little afraid” himself. It also appears from his testimony that the fence was not blown over, but that the wind carried it for at least six feet before it fell. The fence was six or seven feet high, and the sidewalk twelve feet wide; and plaintiff said that he was on the edge of the sidewalk when he was struck down by the flying fence. The testimony of the witnesses for the defendant conclusively shows that a cyclone prevailed in the vicinity. It appears that the front of a paint-shop on the premises in question was blown out into the street, and that the shop was so wrecked that it had to be taken down. A new fence in the vicinity was also thrown down, and many windows of neighboring buildings were blown in. One witness says that two sheets of corrugated iron, eight feet long by two feet wide, were blown off the roof of his house,—one into the street, and the other a block away. Mr. Detnott testified that the roof of the annex of school-house Ho. 15 was torn off, and that four other buildings very near the fence in question were also unroofed.
We have stated only a portion of the facts proven by the witnesses for the defendant as to the violence of the storm; and, after carefully considering the case, we are of opinion that the complaint should have been dismissed on the ground that there was no evidence of negligence of the defendant. The testimony clearly establishes that the fence was blown from its position, a fact which tends strongly to prove that it was strong, and resisted the violence of the wind; for, if the fence was weak, it would have simply fallen. The storm was of such violence that the result should be treated as the act of God. Sheldon v. Sherman, 42 N. Y. 484. The owner was not called upon to construct a fence which could withstand a storm which unroofed houses, and did like damage. He was only bound to keep his property in a reasonably safe condition.
We think that on another ground the judgment cannot, be sustained. The defendant was sued in his representative capacity, and was one of three trus