Upon the jury’s answers, favorable to the plaintiff, to the specific questions of fact submitted, the court directed and the jury returned a general verdict for the amount of plaintiff’s damages as assessed by the jury (Civ. Prac. Act, § 459), namely in the sum of $6,000; doing so subject to opinion (Civ. Prac. Act, § 461) without objection by counsel as to form. (See for principle — acquiescence — Bail v. N. Y., N. H. & H. R. R. Go., 201 N. Y. 355.) The defendant by appropriate motions to set aside the verdicts (special and general) and for a new trial, and otherwise, has submitted to the court the question of the propriety of any recovery by the plaintiff, urging in effect that she has no case against the defendant as a matter of law on this record. The court applied the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur over the objection and exception of the defendant. I admit that the propriety of that ruling, notwithstanding my determination indicated infra, is not beyond the realm of debate.
The plaintiff was a guest of defendant, who was operating the automobile in which both were riding upon a public highway in Dutchess county, which highway was straight for a considerable distance on either side of the point of the accident and was smoothly paved. Until the time of the accident the trip had been without
The defendant relies on the rulings respectively made in Brown v. Klein (230 App. Div. 681) and Salomone v. Yellow Taxi Corporation (242 N. Y. 251) as being authority for the suggestion that the said doctrine does not apply to the facts of this case. These cases are distinguishable, however, from the one at bar, for each presented a situation in which proof of attendant circumstances was so lacking that a finding of negligence would be predicated of necessity upon the merest conjecture. Hammond v. Hammond (227 App. Div. 336), also cited by the learned counsel for the defendant, was one in which the evidence showed that an automobile skidded upon a wet pavement, which skidding might well have happened without negligence on the part of its operator. (See, however, Mackenzie v. Oakley, supra.) In the case just cited the language of Mintubn, J. (94 N. J. Law, 66, at p. 67) is germane to the present inquiry: “ The situation presented is within the rule applicable to an accident, which suddenly and for no apparent cause happens, and yet from the very fact of its occurrence an abnormal situation is presented which bespeaks negligence in operation, under the rule of res ipsa loquitur, which calls upon the defendant for an explanation to exculpate herself from the legal inference or presumption of negligence arising therefrom.”
Whether discussed in this memorandum or not, the several
Each motion of the defendant in relation to the special verdict of the jury and to the general verdict returned by the jury upon the direction of the court to set the same aside and for a new trial is denied. Exception to the defendant. The court at the same term as duly continued directs that judgment be entered in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant for the sum of $6,000, with interest thereon from the date of the redition of the verdict, to wit, June 15, 1932. The defendant’s motion for judgment in its favor is denied. Exception to the defendant as to each and every ruling. Thirty days’ stay and sixty days to make and serve a case.