105 N.Y.S. 524 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1907
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
The action was brought to recover damages for negligence of defendant’s highway commissioner, resulting in injury to the plaintiff. The negligence alleged consisted in leaving the approach to a bridge unguarded. ' The plaintiff started to'drive across the bridge. Her horse, after going part way across, became frightened* stopped, refused to proceed further, and backed the wagon off the bridge and over the embankment constituting the approach to the bridge. There was clearly evidence sufficient to authorize the finding by the jury that the highway commissioner was guilty of negligence which caused the accident and injuries to the plaintiff, and the further finding, that the plaintiff was free from contributory negligence. We cannot-say that the verdict was contrary to the evidence, nor.' that it was for too. large an .amount of damages.
It is claimed, however, that errors were committed in the reception of evidence and in the charge, requiring the verdict to be set aside and a new trial granted.
" The real ground of negligence on the part of the commissioner to be considered and passed upon by the jury was the failure to have a guard or barrier along the side of the approach to the bridge, to prevent teams going off the embankment. It Appeared that when the bridge was repaired or rebuilt, six years before the accident, a timber was placed .there and remained until about six months before
While the trial justice did state in his charge the ground of negligence, as leaving the approach to 'the bridge-unguarded at the time the accident occurred, still he, at times, wandered away, from this .ground and .talked about the negligence in removing the timber six months -before the accident, and getting further away from the real ground -of negligence, he charged the jury that if the purpose.of' putting the timber upon the approach to the bridge six years before .the accident and the use made .of-it while it lay. there was ,as a sidewalk ,and not a barrier to prevent'people-'from driving off the embankment, then plaintiff could not -recover,-it would end the lawsuit,. and tlieir verdict should be for the defepdaht. bFo exception was taken to these matters' contained in the charge by either side. It is hardly necessary to discuss the errors, thus committed. The only proximate cause of the accident, if any, was the dangerous condition of the approach at the time the accident occurred,- by reason of its-being allowed - to be unguarded,' and whether it was at that time so dangerous as to charge the town with liability by reason of the negligence of the commissioner was the question of fact for the jury. Even if the removal of the timber six months before the accident was a negligent act, stiff that was not the proximate ca,use of the accident. Itwus not the fact of such removal, but that there was no guard there when the accident occurred,, that was -the ■ proximate cause. It was not necessary the timber, should remain there. Any' other guard might have been placed there, before the accident, as the photographs show one was so placed after the accident occurred. The attention of the jury' should have beep kept to the'real-ground of negligence, which could be found to be. the proximate cause of the accident, and counsel should have been
We do not agree with the defendant that this accident was, as matter of law, one that could not reasonably have been'apprehended or expected to occur. At most this question was one of fact for the jury, and was left for the jury to decide.
This is the second trial of this case. (See 107 App. Div. 172.) It seems to be a proper case for the recovery of a verdict, and we hardly think the verdict last obtained should be'set aside for. merely technical errors that very Likely resulted in no injury to the defendant.
Robson, J., concurred; Spring, J., concurred in result only; McLennan, P. J¡, and Reuse, J., dissented on the ground that reversible error was committed in receiving the declarations of the former, highway commissioner, and also upon the ground that the. absence of a barrier was not the proximate cause of the accident.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.