120 N.Y.S. 1020 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
Plaintiff collided with a lighted car shortly after nine o’clock at night in November, on Broadway, Brooklyn. He and his partner from their store walked about a half block to the cprner, where they separated, and the plaintiff, leaving the sidewalk, saw an approaching car some 125 feet away, as he testifies, and, without further attention, passed upon its tracks, about 20 feet distant, and was injured. His partner, standing meantime on the sidewalk, was attracted by the noise of the car, and seeing it- near the plaintiff, as he was passing onto the track, ineffectually called to him in warning. The double tracks were under an elevated railroad supported by pillars midway between the tracks and sidewalk. Cars are operated in such infinitely varying relations to other uses of the street
Lofsten v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co. (184 N. Y. 148, revg. 97 App. Div. 395). Plaintiff, of mature age,' approaching the curb, saw a car fifty feet distant approaching at the rate of five or six miles .per hour. He did not look again towards car, nor take the slightest pains to ascertain where car' was, until a shout called his attention to it. There was nothing to obstruct the view or to divert his attention.
Healey v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co. (18 App. Div. 623). Plaintiff on stoop óf a house looked towards Bedford avenue to see if car was coming; saw none, proceeded to,, and “ walked easy ”
Kappus v. Metropolitan Street R. Co. (82 App. Div. 13). Plaintiff, immediately prior to the accident at the southwest corner of Ninety-first street and Second avenue, looked north and south and .saw no north-bound car; walked slowly east on the south crosswalk ; before reaching south-bound tracks, again looked and saw no cars; did not look again until he stepped upon north-bound tracks, when he saw car almost upon him and was struck by it. It was dark, but the car was unobstructed. One of plaintiff’s witnesses stated that plaintiff looked north before he started over the tracks, and the car was ten feet north of Ninetieth street; that plaintiff did not stop nor look south, and that when he stepped on track the car was two feet away. Another of his witnesses testified that plaintiff did not look in any direction after leaving the corner, and that when he stepped on the north-bound track the car was close upon him. It was ruled that plaintiff’s negligence contributed to liis injury.
Lynch v. Third Ave. R. R. Co. (88 App. Div. 604). In the day time plaintiff, when leaving the northeast to go to the northwest corner at the intersection of streets, saw “ about a block and a half to two blocks away ” a car plainly visible ; thereafter he used no care and was struck. Judgment for plaintiff was reversed, Patterson, J., dissenting, and Laugmlin, J., concurring in result on" ground that verdict was against the weight of evidence.
Greene v. Metropolitan St. R. Co. (100 App. Div. 303.) Plaintiff at corner of street in the evening saw a rapidly approaching car three-quarters of a block away; did not look again until he was in the center of the. south-bound track, where he could not escape collision. The opinion states that it was contributory negligence to step in front of a rapidly approaching car, and that in this view it was immaterial whether he looked after leaving sidewalk. I consider that his failure to look intermediate the curb and the track was itself the cause of his stepping in front of tlie car.
Robinson v. Union R. Co. (121 App. Div. 558, affirming judgment of nonsuit). Plaintiff crossing in the middle of block after
McAuliffe v. New York City R. Co. (122 App. Div. 633). Decedent left the curb to cross the street, had only seven or eight feet to go before reaching the track, but before he could get across was hit and killed.; he had an unobstructed view of a lighted' car. Contributory negligence, prevented recovery.
Tully v. New York City R. Co. (127 App. Div. 688). A woman aged sixty eight looked before she attempted to cross street and saw a car two blocks away and was struck near the rail of fourth track. The court held that a nonsuit should have been granted, als.o that the court should have charged that the plaintiff was required to look after she-left the curb before she tried to cross the track. Laughlin, J., dissented..
Daly v. New York City R. Co., No. 1 (132 App. Div. 359). Plaintiff and wife on sidewalk on south side of Twenty-third street, New York, wished to board west-bound car. Plaintiff looked and saw west-bound car at a distance of 75 or 100 feet from him ; looked west and found way safe over eastrbound tracks, attempted to cross on the walk to the north side without looking east again,' and was struck on the west-bound track by the car he had seen to the west off him. Nonsuit on ground of contributory negligence was approved.
The above cases indicate the general rule. But conditions presenting a complication of dangers, aggravated by unappreciated negligence of the defendant and the death of the plaintiff, whereby his evidence was lost, justified a holding that the absence of evidence of a second look toward the offending car did not. prevent recovery.
Boyce v. New York City R. Co. (126 App. Div. 248). The decedent at luncheon hour attempted to cross lower Broadway and was killed by a south-bound car going at a ■ speed characterized as reckless. The curb was thirteen feet from the first rail arid seventeen feet eight inches from the second rail. At the curb the decedent looked both ways. A car was approaching on the south
Counsellor the respondent calls attention to other cases that give him scanty aid.
Lewis v. Erie R. R. Co. (105 App. Div. 292). Decedent while driving a team was killed at a railroad crossing. There was no evidence that he looked and listened. The court held that there was some evidence that he could not have seen or heard train until it was too late. The verdict for plaintiff was sustained. •
Thornton v. Interurban St. R. Co. (128 App. Div. 872). The plaintiff in the daytime went to the curb of the street and then, and before attempting to cross, looked in both directions for a car, did not see any car coming, started to cross and was injured on the tracks. The report does not show the distance over which plaintiff passed to reach the tracks, nor her environment, and the language suggests that she looked at the curb and also before crossing. Her recovery was sustained.
Plunkett v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co. (129 App. Div. 572). A woman aged sixty-five years, in a district described as “ rural,” at the curb looked and again'looked before getting to the track on which the car hit her, but saw no car. There was some evidence of obstructed view, of the lights of- the car obscured by the window shades, and the judgment for the plaintiff was sustained. The court, Hooker, J., dissenting, refused to apply the doctrine that if she looked she saw car, or looked negligently if she failed to see it. The plaintiff fulfilled the law of looking, but escaped' the condemnation of not seeing.
Quinlan v. Richmond Light & R. R. Co. (133 App. Div. 402). A boy nearly ten years old was playing ball in the street; the ball bounded across the street and he started to get it; he looked both ways, saw a car about 215 feet away ; between the double tracks he looked again and saw the car 44 feet away, increased his speed 8,nd cleared track, but was struck by projecting handle of car.
Duffy v. Interurban St. R. Co. (52 Misc. Rep. 177). The holding is that a person who at a crossing attempts to go a distance of 15 feet in front of a car approaching from a distance of 150 feet, is not .perse negligent. The question of looking "the second, time is not presented. '
Robkin v. Joline (114 N. Y. Supp. 98). The opinion states that “the jury could properly find that when these pedestrians left the curb, with the apparent intention of crossing the track, the car was at a sufficient distance to have justified their attempt, in reliance upon the observance of ordinary care by the person charged with its control.” It was- said that the motorman had ample opportunity to observe plaintiffs’ approach and to expect their presence on thek track, and that plaintiffs were not per se negligent, even though their crossing involved lessening the speed of the car, and that the court properly refused to charge that' plaintiffs were guilty of negligence if the. jury found that plaintiffs omitted to look at approaching car after leaving the curb. As the reported case gives no measurements of distance or time, nor statement of the'relation of the plaintiffs to the car, it is impossible to estimate its value in the present case.'
The plaintiff’s affirmative evidence of indifference to the car after he started to cross the street precludes recovery.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to to abide the event.
Woodward, Jenks and JRich, JJ., concurred ; Hirschberg, P. J., concurred in result.
Judgment and' order of the Municipal Court reversed and new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.