111 N.Y.S. 670 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
The plaintiff, a married woman about forty years of' age, Was injured by falling over a stone* conceded to be fourteen, to sixteen
This court will not fail to take notice that the intersection of Smith street with Atlantic avenue is a busy point; that it is much traveled, and is almost hourly in the view of members of the police-force, and it can hardly be questioned that a stone of the dimensions which are conceded would not constitute a dangerous obstruction to the highway, one which the propér authorities are bound , to remove in the discharge Of their duty to maintain the highways in a reasonably safe condition for public travel. Plaintiff’s witness, Tierney, ■ testified that the accident happened at half-past five or,a quarter to six on the 12th day of January, 1905; that he saw the plaintiff after she fell and while she was being picked up; that he saw a stone there; “it was, about twelve, fourteen or sixteen inches long and about six inches thick; ” that Atlantic avenue is not paved with asphalt, but with cobblestones ; that he did not know where this stone came from; that he saw it up against the pole before the accident happened at all; that he saw “ the stone there for quite some time before the accident, more than a week, going on two weeks I noticed such a stone there. I had remarked about it before. I could not swear that it was a part of the pavement, it was not taken up on that side. It was. a loose stone; ” that “ During the time I saw ■ it there it was between the pole and the electric light,- between the car track and the crossing, about four or five or six feet I judge from the curb and about two feet two and a half or three feet from .the crosswalk. I saw it two or
While it is true, perhaps, that this witness is not as positive as he might be, it seems to us that reasonable-minded men, listening to all the testimony, might reach the conclusion that this particular stone — no other having been shown to have been there at any time — had been in the highway at a busy corner, where there was no apparent need of it, and where it was a constant menace to those lawfully using the highway, and the fact that it may not have been in the particular spot all of the time is beside the question. The fact
The judgment appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Jenks, Hooker, Gaynor and Rich, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.