118 N.Y.S. 657 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
The plaintiff, Pearl Green and one Bennett, between eight and nine o’clock on a September evening, were driving in a top buggy along a country road which connects the Decatur road running into Worcester and the road running into Westford and is about three and a half miles in length. The road follows the windings of a creek and is called the Gulf road as it goes along the gulf or val
A town does not assume to make its highways absolutely safe, and to guarantee against accident, but is to make them reasonably safe for public use in the ordinary way. A team driving in either way along the road could not get off the precipice except by driving upon the shoulder at a considerable elevation before it arrived at the nine-foot space. Teams would not ordinarily be turning at sharp angles or backing across the road at this place because of the embankment upon both sides. A team could not go down the embankment except in just- the way this team did by backing right across the highway into it, and it could not be foreseen that any
The plaintiffs evidence shows that Bennett was driving. Plaintiff’s witness Pearl Green testified to that fact. Upon cross-examination she swore she did not state at the C.onrow house, immediately after the accident, that the plaintiff was driving up to near the scene of the accident. The defendant then called the witness Waterman and offered to show that the witness Green did make such statement. The evidence related to a matter material to the issue, for if the plaintiff was driving and succeeded in placing the horse in the position where it was backed down the precipice, it would make her contributory negligence a live question in the case. It was competent to. discredit the witness by proving her contradictory statement with reference to this material fact. The judgment should, therefore, be reversed upon the law and the facts and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
All concurred, except Smith, P. J., and Cochrane, J., who dissented.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.