49 N.Y.S. 777 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The plaintiff has recovered a verdict of $15,000 against the defendant for negligently causing the death of her husband, Clifford A. Schmidt, who was a passenger on one of its electric trolley cars, on the way from Coney Island to Brooklyn, on the afternoon of the '16th day of May, 1895. The motive power on the defendant’s line is applied by what is known as the center-post system, the wires through which the electric current is conveyed to the cars being supported by posts set between the two tracks. At the time of the accident Mr. Schmidt was seated at the end of the forward seat of an open car, with his back towards the front and his side next to a guard rail which ran along the side of the car nearest the line of posts. At a point about a mile and a half from the Brighton Beach Hotel, when, according to one of the witnesses, the car began to go so fast that it swayed a great deal, a gust of wind blew off Mr. Schmidt’s hat. He arose from his seat, grasping the stanchion of the car at his right hand, and stood for an instant, as though to beckon to the conductor. At this moment his body was seen suddenly to sway,—although his feet did not leave the floor of the car;—his head came in contact with one of the trolley poles, and he sank, fatally hurt, down upon the floor of the car. The learned trial judge charged the jury
With these views I should have no difficulty in sustaining this judgment, were it not for some errors in the admission of evidence upon the trial. It is only necessary to refer to one of these. Richard Hchermerhorn, a civil engineer and railroad man, who was called by the plaintiff as an expert, was allowed to state to the jury his observations as to the vertical and lateral oscillation of the cars over the defendant’s road, about a month after the accident. His testimony on this subject was objected to on the ground that the conditions were not shown to be the same, or the car, or the load upon the car, or the rate of speed. The evidence was received over the defendant’s objection and exception, and the witness testified to a vertical oscillation
The judgment should be reversed, and a new trial granted; costs to abide the event. All concur.