84 N.Y.S. 544 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
Lead Opinion
We are of opinion that this judgment must be reversed on account of error in the charge. The suit grows out of a collision between one of the cars of the New York, Westchester & Connecticut Traction Company and a wagon upon which the plaintiff was riding. Speaking of the relative rights and duties of the motorman of the car and the driver of the wagon, the learned trial judge told the jury, among other things:
“It is the duty of the motorman, of, course, to carry his passengers with reasonable expedition. That is what these companies are for.. Their business is not to lally-gag from here to Mt. Vernon when you get in the cars, but to carry you with reasonable speed. * * * The car has the right of way over the track. The law gives it the right of way. Nobody has the right to be there when the car comes up. Anybody there owes it a duty to be off before the car comes up; or, to put it more precisely, the law requires them to use reasonable prudence to be off when the car comes up. You have no right, even, to make a car slow up. You have no such right whatever. You have not the right to get on a railroad track and slow a car up. It is your duty to use reasonable care to be off by the time the car comes up, because the car is carrying the public. There may be fifty people in the car, or thirty, or twenty, who are not to be stopped by one person who gets on the track. On the contrary, that one person’s duty is to use reasonable care to be off. He has a right to be there, but with that right goes the duty to be vigilant to be off before the car comes up.”
Judgment and order reversed, and new trial granted; costs to abide the event. All concur, except WOODWARD, J., who dissents.
Dissenting Opinion
The plaintiff seeks to recover damages for personal injuries conceded to have been sustained by him in a collision between a wagon driven by the son of the defendant George Underhill and a car operated by the defendant railroad company’s servants, the plaintiff being an employe of the defendant Underhill, and engaged in assisting in delivering a load of straw in the city of Mt. Vernon. The straw had been delivered, and the plaintiff and Benjamin F. Underhill were on their way home; Underhill driving the team, and the plaintiff sitting on the edge of the hay rack, with his feet overhanging one of the rails of the defendant railroad company. The roadway was macadamized, was 30 feet wide, with a single-track street-surface railroad in the middle. It was after dark,
The appellant urges that this was not an inevitable accident; that it might .have been avoided by the exercise of greater care on the part of both of the defendants; and suggests that, if Underhill had driven farther over upon the side of the street, the collision with the outer edge of the hayrack would not have resulted, and it was this contact with the hayrack which is alleged to have caused the injury complained of by the plaintiff. But the question is never presented in this kind of actions whether the accident, in the light of what is known afterwards, might have been prevented by the exercise of a higher degree of care. It is whether the parties, under all of the circumstances, exercised that reasonable degree of care which réasonably careful and prudent men would or should have used under the conditions then and there existing; and it may not be said as a matter of law that Underhill was negligent in driving upon the highway, outside of the tracks of the defendant railroad company, in such a manner that 6 to 12 inches of his hayrack overhung the space which would be occupied by a car in passing. Under ordinary circumstances he would be able to see the approaching car in time to get out of the way, and it might be highly imprudent for him in the darkness to drive at the extreme outside of the beaten track,'where his overhanging hayrack might come in contact with trees, hitching posts, or other obstructions. The jury, from the evidence, which was exceedingly vague as to the exact manner in which the plaintiff
The only questions remaining are whether the learned trial court erred in charging the jury. There can be no doubt, if it were true that the learned court had charged that the defendant railroad company had the exclusive right of way over its tracks, that there would have to be a reversal of this judgment. The difficulty with the plaintiff’s proposition is that a fair reading of the charge does not convey this idea. As I read the charge, it leaves clearly the impression that the defendant railroad company has a paramount rigid to the use of its tracks;. and this' is beyond all question the law; established by so many authorities that to cite them were a needless concession to drudgery. The language of the charge upon this point is as follows:
“The ear has the right of way over the track. The law gives it the right of way. Nobody has the right to be there when the car comes up. Anybody there owes it a duty to be off before the car comes up; or, to put it more precisely, the law requires them to use reasonable prudence to be off when the car comes up. You have not the right even, to make a car slow up. You have no such right whatever. You have not the right to get on a railroad track and slow a car up. It is your duty to use reasonable care to be off by the time the car comes up, because the ear is carrying the public. There may be fifty people in the car, or thirty, or twenty, who are not to be stopped by one person who gets on the track. On the contrary, that one person’s duty is to use reasonable care to be off. He has a right to be there, but with that right goes the duty to be vigilant to be off before the car comes up. I only explain this to show the relative duty and position of the motorman. It is not a one-sided thing. He has a right to expect people will use reasonable prudence also. He is not the only one required to be reasonably prudent. People may be on the track, but it is their duty to be vigilant and careful to •be away from it by the time a car comes up. That is not always possible. If you never got on a track in Broadway until you could get on there without coming near a car, you might spend your day going a block; while out in the country, where there is nothing, you can get on and off at will; there is no trouble at all keeping away. So that is relative again. What would be carelessness on a country road may not be carelessness in Broadway.”
Clearly, the jury could not have understood that the right of the defendant railroad company upon its tracks was exclusive; that it had a1 right to run its cars over the same regardless of the presence of others. Taking the language in its ordinary sense, the charge in effect told the jury that the railroad company had the paramount right to the use of its tracks; that persons using the highway had a right to be upon the tracks, but that it was their duty to use reasonable care tó be out of the way when a car came along; and that this duty of using reasonable care was mutual as between the railroad company, in the operation of its cars, and others lawfully using the highway. Accepting the rule contended for by the appellant that “the charge should receive such a construction as ordinary men, not learned in the law, would be apt to place upon it” (Corn Exchange Bank v. American Dock Co., 149 N. Y. 174, 182, 43 N. E. 915, 917), I am persuaded that the court did not err in this charge, but, on the contrary, took more than the usual care to state the limitations upon the rights of the respective parties.
I think it was proper for the court to submit the question of plaintiff’s contributory negligence to the jury, for I have already pointed
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.