87 N.Y.S. 906 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
This action was brought to recover damages alleged to have been caused to the next of kin of Fay Pitkin through his negligent killing by the defendant.
We think that the judgment should be reversed for the reasons that the plaintiff did not establish either negligence upon the part of the defendant or the right to recover more than nominal damages as the result of the intestate’s death, even though wrongfully caused by said defendant.
The accident happened July 18, 1900, at defendant’s station in the village of Sackett’s Harbor. It was caused by intestate’s stumbling over a stepping box placed by the side of one of defendant’s tracks at said station, and falling under the wheels of a passenger train which was drawing into the station. Defendant’s station house stood upon its grounds some distance from the street, and was
There was evidence that at this time the defendant had commenced to use small stools for the purpose of assisting its passengers to alight, and which were put down and taken up as occasion required, and that the use of a large step, such as the one in question, was at least not general.
We shall assume for- the purposes of this case that the intestate was so properly at defendant’s station that it owed to him the ordinary obligation to exercise reasonable care to maintain its premises in a reasonably safe condition. Giving plaintiff the benefit of this assumption, we still think that defendant did not. violate this obligation .by supplying and allowing to remain upon its premises the box complained of.
It is somewhat difficult in our view to entirely separate the questions of the defendant’s negligence and the intestate’s contributory negligence, but upon the consideration of all the facts taken together, we think it was improper to allow the jury to say that the
It is conceded, as of course it must be, that it was entirely proper for defendant to furnish some sort of a step which would make it easier for passengers to get from the car step to the ground or vice versa.. This was not only proper but commendable. The plaintiff, however, says that defendant ought to have used movable stools which could be removed when the occasion - for use had passed. Even if we regard the evidence as, establishing that such stools had come into common use, we do not think that there was anything in such use which limited defendant to them, or prevented it from employing the other appliance which for a long time had been maintained at this station. It was a perfectly simple contrivance with nothing inherently dangerous about it. So far as appears it was kept in about the same spot and no one prior to this day had ever found danger or difficulty in either- using or avoiding it. If some stranger coming there in the night time had tripped' over it a different question might have been presented. But we think there was nothing which should have indicated to or warned defendant that a person in the daytime would be injured by or as the result of it.
The case is entirely different from those cited by plaintiff’s counsel to sustain his right of recovery. In Ayres v. D.,L. dk W. R. R. Co. (158 N- Y. 254) a mail bag had been left upon the station platform. That was not its proper place and it served no useful purpose by being there. In addition, the plaintiff, who was a stranger to the location, met her accident by stumbling oyer the bag in the darkness while she was properly upon the platform.
In Maclennan v. Long Island R. R. Co. (20 J. & S. 22) a box had been left upon the station platform. There was no legitimate reason for its being where it was, and plaintiff in this case also, being a stranger, stumbled over it in the darkness as he was using the platform.
The case at bar comes more within the principles of Dougherty v. Village of Horseheads (159 N. Y. 154), Robert v. Powell (168 id. 411) and Hart v. Greimell (122 id. 371).
We pass to the second question. The intestate at the time of his death left him surviving as his only next of kin his father. He also left a mother. Six months after the boy was killed and before the action came on for trial the father died. It is urged on behalf of the defendant that the father as the next of kin was the sole person for whose benefit were recoverable any damages resulting from the intestate’s death; that the opportunity for such damages termi-' noted at the father’s death, and that under the circumstances of this case thé damages which could have been sustained between the death of the boy and of the father could not be more than nominal.
We believe that an examination of the statutes upon which must rest this right of action necessarily leads to the conclusion that defendant’s contention is well founded.
Section 1902 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that the personal representatives of a deceased person who left a husband, wife or next of kin may “ maintain an action to recover damages for a wrongful act, neglect or default by which the decedent’s death was caused.” The damages recovered in such an action “ are exclusively for the benefit of the decedent’s husband or wife and next of kin, and when they are collected they must be distributed by the plaintiff as if they were unbequeathed assets left in his hands after payment of all debts.” (Code Civ. Proc. § 1903.)
' “ The damages awarded to the plaintiff may be such a sum as the jury * * * deems to be a fair and just compensation for the pecuniary injuries resulting from the decedents death to the person or persons for whose benefit the action is brought.” (Code Civ. Proc. § 1904.)
The right to these damages is a right of property which accrues at the moment of the negligent killing and at such moment becomes vested m the beneficiary for whose benefit the action may be main
We thus have it, under these provisions and principles, that upon the death of Fay Pitkin, if he was negligently killed by defendant, a right accrued to his administrators to bring an action to recbver damages which had resulted from such death simply and solely to his father, who was his only next of kin. The statutory provisions which alone create this cause of action permit a recovery only for the person who, as the next of kin of the intestate at the moment he died, suffered damages as the result of such death. Those are the damages allowed and' recoverable to the exclusion of any other elements or consideration whatevér.: And the proposition seems tb us jplain that in this, case the jury wore limited to the allowance of such damages as the father had suffered- down to the time of .his death, and were not entitléd to consider or think of anything else. .It is conceded by the learned counsel for the respondent that, measured by such a rule as this, the damages allowed were excessive and that the father during the six months which elapsed between the death of his son-and himself could not have suffered more than nominal injury. It is suggested by the counsel, however, in his brief that “ the damages to be recovered become fixed at the time of the death of plaintiff’s intestate, and the subsequent death of .the father did not alter the question.” If this language^ should be construed’as holding that the right to damages in behalf of the next of kin accrued and became fixed at the time of the death of plaintiff’s intestate we should, of course, have no difficulty in agreeing with it. But we ’are unable to agree with any construction which holds that at such moment the amount of damages to be recovered in behalf of the beneficiary became so fixed that it could not be. altered by subsequent circumstances, like the death of the next of kin. It seems to us that a consideration of some of the elements which a jury are allowed to take into account in fixing .damages in such a case as, this will demonstrate in a familiar manner that the duration of the life of the next of kin is always, a feature to be considered.
In case of the death of a child the jury are entitled to take into
It may be suggested that a defendant which had negligently caused the death of one person could practically escape liability therefor if it should be guilty of still,further acts of negligence in immediately thereafter causing the death of the person who was the next of kin of the first intestate. This, of course, is an extreme illustration, but we are unable to perceive any way in which jt may properly lead us to seek to overrule absolute statutory provisions. The statutes, in creating this new cause of action, have seen fit, as' we read them, to limit the damages recoverable to those sustained by the next of kin at the time of the death. They have not seen fit to take into account the possibility that by the speedy death of such next of kin the damages recoverable might be made nominal,
While the conclusions thus reached by us are not expressly stated in, we think they are fully warranted by the discussion in and principles of Mundt v. Glokner (26 App. Div. 123); Lipp v. Otis Brothers & Co. (161 N. Y. 559); Matter of Meekin, v. Brooklyn H. R. R. Co. (supra).
The judgment and order should! be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide event.
All concurred, McLennan, P. J., on first ground stated in opinion only.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event, upon questions of law ojjly, the facts having been examined and no error found therein.