95 N.Y.S. 232 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
. The complaint in this action charges the defendant with negligence in permitting and allowing one of its wires used for the purpose of conducting electricity to become, brohen, and in allowing and permitting said wire to remain broken and out of repair and to hang, suspended downward toward thé ground so that said wire might come in contact with persons in or upon or using said street while the said wire was charged with electricity. The evidence of two witnesses for the plaintiff was to the effect that the wire had been down at least two days prior to'the accident. Another witness swore that it was down four days, while still another witness swore
The other branch of the case, however, to wit, the charge of negligence in suffering the wire to fall and present this dangerous situation, seems to have been overlooked by the learned trial judge; This wire extended along the public highway. It was charged with a dangerous -and deadly current of electricity. That the breaking of a wire under such circumstances would constitute a prima facie case of - negligence so as to call upon the defendant to give full explanation would seem to be undoubted. In fact the learned counsel for the defendant in his brief admits this general doctrine as applicable to this case, but insists that the doctrine itself goes to the extent only of declaring that from the accident the jury may infer negligence but are not bound so to do. Plaintiff’s counsel, granting the right of 'the jury to disregard the prima facie case thus made, contends that he has not been given the benefit of the rule by the learned trial judge in his charge.
Examining the charge of the court, it was first charged that to establish his case the plaintiff must produce evidence which satisfied the jury that the defendant had done something, or omitted something, which he ought otherwise to have done. The charge then proceeds: “ It won’t do for you to guess, to say that the boy is killed and somebody ought to pay; but the plaintiff must produce evidence to you as sensible, practical men, which lodges in your mind and brings to it a reasonable satisfaction that he is right in the controversy. If the evidence is evenly balanced, or .if you cannot find that the necessary fact exists, then the plaintiff cannot" recover. * * * It don’t rest upon the defendant to account for the accident, and it will not do to say that, because the boy was killed by the defendant’s wire, that that makes the defendant liable. This defendant had a perfect right to run through the streets of Glens Falls its wires and to carry through them the current of electricity which it maintained through them; and if, after doing that as it did, it wouldn’t be fair if this line should break that day, perhaps a few hours before the accident, and then the boy was killed, to say that the defendant had been negligent; that wouldn’t do. Because it might be, and would be in such a case, one of- those accidents which we all must stand when they come to us.”
The exceptions-noted are, we think, well taken. If the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur be here applicable upon proof of the happening of the accident, the negligence of the defendant was prima fade established, and it was for the defendant to account for the accident,' or at least to give such explanation as was in its power of how the wire happened fo be down. The qualification made by the court, to the effect that this was so “ under ordinary circumstances,” would seem to imply that the rule was not applicable to the case at bar. We think the request to charge was properly made and should have been granted without qualification.
The force of this exception,' too, would seem to be emphasized by what seems to us an utter failure on the part of the defendant to •explain this accident. It was stated upon .the argument that this wire down Lawrence street was no longer in use.. This does not-directly appear in the record. It appears inferentially, however. The testimony of one of plaintiff’s witnesses was that the wire had been severed for nine days. If the wire were in constant use some proof could probably have been secured that the light which it fed had been burning during some of those nine days. Moreover, within three or four days after the happening of the accident a wire was put up there by the superintendent himself for the purpose of
It follows, therefore, that this judgment must be reversed and a new trial ordered. ,
All concurred; Chester and Houghton, JJ., in result, on the ground that the verdict is against the weight of evidence.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.