53 N.Y.S. 449 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
Plaintiff’s intestate, a daughter eight years and four months old, in attempting to pass over Lexington avenue, between One Hundred
It appeared upon the trial that two persons witnessed the accident, Nathan Pincus and his daughter Eva, and their testimony tended to ■show that the deceased was killed between twelve' and one o’clock in the afternoon, on a bright, clear day, at a place where there was ■an unobstructed view of the street and of the car in question for something over 100 feet;, that when they first observed the deceased, ■she was standing by the curbstone in front of the store occupied by them, on the east side of Oolumbus avenue, between One Hundred ■and Sixth and One Hundred and Seventh streets, and that the distance from where she stood to the nearest rail of the track on which the car was approaching was about 21 feet, and that the' car was ■then near One Hundred and Seventh street, nearly or quite 100 feet :away; that they observed the deceased looking up and down the ;avenue,- and then start towards the track, but their testimony failed to disclose .what precautions, if any, were thereafter taken by her. One of the witnesses testified that she was struck in the middle of the track, while the other, that she was struck just as she was stepping on the track.' In either case it is apparent that, had she exercised any care whatever before going upon the track, her life would have been spared. It is undisputed that, after the car left One Hundred and Seventh street, she could have seen it if she had looked. It is not even suggested that her movements towards the "track, after leaving the curbstone, were impeded in • any way; that her vision was obscured; that her attention was distracted, or, indeed, that anything occurred that could have prevented her seeing the ■approaching car and avoiding the accident, had she exercised any care whatever. We have thus presented this state of facts: A-•child eight years and four months old, of ordinary intelligence good eyesight and hearing, accustomed to go upon' the street unat
It would seem that the deceased either did not look to see whether a car was approaching, or, if she did, then she blindly and heedlessly walked in front of it. In either case, one is irresistibly led to the conclusion that her death resulted in part, at least, from her own negligence.
It, therefore, follows that the complaint was properly dismissed, and the. judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with eobts.