15 Misc. 30 | The Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo | 1895
The action is to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff. While attempting to cross the defendant’s tracks at Broadway and Broome streets, on October 26, 1893, she was knocked down by one of defendant’s cable cars, called by her the “south-bound car.” The accident occurred ■shortly after 6 p. m., when the plaintiff was going home from work, her route lying across Broadway. The plaintiff attempted to cross on the upper crossing at Broome street. She looked around, and observed a north-bound car very near the corner, and the south-bound car apparently about half a block away. The north-bound car passed by, and she had almost reached the further rail of the first track in safety, when a horse and wagon, moving westerly from Broome street into Broadway, turned into the space between the tracks; the horse towards the plaintiff’s face; the wagon sweeping around when the horse was reined in, cutting off her progress. While the plaintiff’s attention was occupied with this threatened danger, the south-bound car bore down upon her, striking her with such force that she was thrown several feet before she fell; and the car, still advancing, came in contact with her again before it was stopped. There is the conflict usual in cases of this character; but as the jury, on evidence satisfacto,rily sustaining the result, found for the plaintiff, we assume the facts to be as stated by her.
While it has been held that street cars have a preference in the streets, and that it is the duty of pedestrians to respect that right (Fenton v. Railroad Co., 126 N. Y. 625, 26 N. E. 967; Kennedy v. Railway Co. [Com. Pl.] 32 N. Y. Supp. 153), we must not be
The most serious question in the case is presented as follows:
“Plaintiff’s Counsel: I ask your honor to charge that if the gripman, upon approaching the crossing, failed to exercise due and reasonable care to ■warn crossing pedestrians of the car’s approach, then the defendant is liable. The Court: And the plaintiff was entirely free from any contributory negligence. With the qualifications added by the court, the request is charged. (Exception taken by defendant’s counsel.)”
It will be observed that, while the court did not charge that there was any absolute duty on the part of the gripman to sound the gong, it gave a binding instruction to the effect that, if he failed to warn crossing pedestrians of the car’s approach, the defendant was liable. This was going too far. In view of the conceded fact that the plaintiff saw the car approaching, warning to her was unnecessary. Sounding the gong or shouting would therefore have been of little practical service. A vigorous application of the brakes was what was required, and if the gripman had applied them in time, and stopped the car as soon as that could be done by the exercise of reasonable care on his part, the defendant, as matter of law, would not be liable. No defect in the brakes was alleged or proved, and it must be assumed, therefore, that they were amply sufficient for all exigencies. Yet, irrespective of this controlling feature, the mere failure to warn crossing pedestrians-was charged to be an omission of duty in itself sufficient to make the defendant liable. This was error, for which the judgment and order appealed from must be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.