6 N.Y.S. 618 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover damages for an injury which the plaintiff received as the result of a collision in a public highway between a carriage and horses driven by the plaintiff, and a carriage and horses driven by the defendant Lyons, which collision and injury the plaintiff claims was produced by the negligent conduct of Lyons in the management of the team which he drove, and to which the defendant Van Hess contributed, by directing Lyons to pursue the course which he did, and thereby became also liable to the plaintiff. The defendant Van Hess, accompanied by his wife, started from the city of Hew York upon an excursion to the Adirondacks, and when upon the cars, between Saratoga Springs and Horth Creek, R. B. Scarrett, who was at the time an agent of the Blue Mountain Lake Stage & Transportation Company, came into the car where Van Hess was sitting, and the latter applied to such agent for transportation from Horth Creek to Blue Mountain Lake for himself and wife, and Scarrett undertook to furnish a suitable conveyance, charging therefor $11, which Van Hess paid, and Scarrett delivered to him a ticket, as follows: “Blue Mountain Lake Stage and Transportation Company, Ho. 212, Horth Creek, August 3, 1888. Special ticket. The bearer, Mr. Van Hess, has engaged two seats in patent covered buckboard carriages, through to Blue Mountain Lake, party of two. Humber and value of ticket exchanged. Price $11. Cash $11. Buckboard Ho.--. R. B. Scarrett, Agent.” Scarrett testified at the trial as follows: “The defendant at that time paid me the eleven dollars, and I gave him his ticket. In pursuance of that ticket and agreement, I hired a buckboard for the purpose of fulfilling that contract to transport defendant. I hired Mr. Lyons’ carriage.” When the cars reached-Horth Creek the defendant Van Hess and his wife were conducted by Scarrett to such carriage, and Lyons took the driver’s seat, and drove the team. After they had proceeded about two miles, Mr. Van Hess, being disturbed by the dust, which was raised by the teams in advance of theirs, addressed Lyons, as appears by his evidence, as follows: “I asked Mr. Lyons if we would have to keep behind them, and take their dust, all day, and he said: ‘Ho; there is a place just beyond here where I can pass.’ I said: ‘ That is all right; you will do so then.’ I had no other conversation with him on that subject. When we got to the forks of the road he got behind the rear coach as close as he could, and when he came to the place where the road forked he pulled his horses to the left, and urged them forward to a sharp trot, and there were two carriages on the right that Lyons turned out to pass. They were about twenty-five feet apart, as near as I can judge. The first carriage was driven by the plaintiff.. He struck his horses, and started them up into a run, and Lyons urged his horses into a run, and both continued running until the roads came together. Lyons got to the point of intersection first, and plaintiff run his horses so that his near horse struck the off hind wheel of Lyons’ carriage. I was sitting on the off side of the back seat, and I could have put my hand over the side of the carriage, and touched the harness.of the near horse. I don’t know what further occurred to the plaintiff or his carriage.”
The plaintiff denies striking his team, but from all the circumstances we are inclined to think that he did, and that he entered actively into the race for the purpose of keeping the lead. Except the remark of Van Hess, given above, we fail to discover a word or act on his part which would justify an inference that he desired Lyons to pass the plaintiff’s team in an improper manner, and we think what he did say, fairly construed, does not justify any such inference. In the conversation with Mr. Ereneh, we fail to perceive that Van
Learned, P. J„ concurs. Landon, J., not voting.