192 A.D. 860 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1920
That the plaintiff’s right leg is in a serious condition appears from the testimony of the physicians of both the plaintiff and defendant upon the trial of this action; that she received such injury by being struck by defendant’s truck, on the 23d day of September, 1918, on Broadway in the city of Kingston, N. Y., is not controverted; that the defendant was guilty of negligence upon that occasion, as found by the jury, seems to have support in the evidence in several particulars. The plaintiff was riding on a trolley car toward her home, going in a southeasterly direction, on Broadway; on account of the skip stop rule the car did not make a stop at Hoffman street, on which street plaintiff resided. She was told by the conductor that she could alight at the switch a short distance beyond the junction of the street upon which she lived with Broadway. She alighted at the switch onto the pavement. The driver of defendant’s truck testified: “ Why, I was a short distance in back of it, yes. * * * Q. Asa matter of fact you were following the car down? A. Oh, I was in back of the car, yes. * * * Q. And you say you were going how fast ? A. About 12 or 14 miles [an hour]. * * * Q. Within what distance can you stop that car going at 12 or 14 miles an hour? A. Why, that is according to how the brakes are. Q. Well, just how were the brakes on this car? A. Well, that I don’t remember; sometimes they were good and sometimes they weren’t. * * * Q. I know, but on this day of the accident, at the time the accident occurred you did not try the brakes, did you? A. No, I didn’t.” The driver was eighteen years old, he did not slow up. The witness Kraft, called by the defendant, says: “ I could see that she was hurrying towards the curb, and at the same instant this truck dashed into sight and at the same instant turned to the right, against the curb.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.