72 A.D. 468 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
The plaintiff recovered a verdict on the first trial of this case, and the judgment entered on it was reversed because the jury was permitted to predicate negligence on the defendant’s part from the fact that at the time of the accident the sidebar on the left side of the car was up. (Whitaker v. Staten Island M. R. R. Co., 65 App. Div. 451.) " As stated by Mr. Justice Willard Bartlett, writing for the court, “ the proof showed that the plaintiff fell or was thrown from the left side of an open car at or near an abrupt' curve in the track after the car had passed the usual stopping place without stopping. " The lady was standing at the time, and had her arm around her little boy to prevent him from falling from the seat in front of her.”
The evidence on the second trial was practically the same as on the first one, but the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant at the close of the evidence," on the ground that there was no proof of defendant’s negligence, and that contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff was established as matter of law. The plaintiff is, therefore, entitled on this appeal to the most favorable inferences dedneible from the evidence, and all disputed facts are to be treated as established in her favor. (Ladd v. Ætna Ins. Co., 147 N. Y. 478, 482; Higgins v. Eagleton, 155 id. 466; Ten Eyck v. Whitbeck, 156 id. 341, 349; Bank of Monongahela Valley v. Wes
Under the rule referred to the evidence must be considered, for the purposes of this appeal, to have established the following facts. The plaintiff and her little boy, about three and a half years old, with her friend Mrs. Armstrong and her little boy, a few months younger, boarded one of the defendant’s open trolley cars at Midland Beach, to go to Richmond or Bergen Point ferry. The cars-run upon Richmond terrace, and in order to take the ferry it is necessary to alight at Richmond avenue, the cars always stopping for that purpose, to the plaintiffs knowledge, at the first or easterly crossing of Richmond avenue. The conductor of the car was notified by Mrs. Armstrong at the time they boarded the car that they desired to leave at the Richmond avenue crossing in order to take the ferry. The plaintiff had traveled on the cars in question thirty times before the accident, and on each occasion the cars stopped on the east side of Richmond avenue without signal. On the day of the accident she stood up as the car approached the crossing, intending to alight, and in ¡the expectation that the car would be- stopped as usual, but instead of stopping it continued going very fast, and, as a consequence, she was thrown out and injured. At the crossing there is an abrupt curve and two open switches and also other railroad tracks laid on Richmond avenue, and it was the rapid motion-of the car in going around the curve, over the other tracks and through the switches, which caused the plaintiff to be thrown out, The motorman himself admitted that it was a dangerous place and practically that he knew it was dangerous to run the car as he was running it. He said: “ I could not run around there full power because the car would not have,swayed (staid?) on the track going around that curve. I knew I was running into a 'dangerous place when I got down-there and I knew that- Mrs. Whitaker was standr ing up in that car. I saw her standing up before I got down there. I saw her at the railroad crossing.” The railroad crossing referred to by him is thirty seconds distant in point of time from the place where the accident occurred. The conductor also admitted that'-he saw the plaintiff standing up before the accident. He said: “ It looked to me as if she was going to look around to notify me. to stop. • T presume that is what she was going to 'do.” He made nó
It is clear that from this evidence the jury would have been entitled to conclude that it was a rule of the company that all cars should stop on the east crossing of Richmond avenue without signal, in order to accommodate passengers who desired to take the ferry; that it was-dangerous to attempt to cross the avenue at a high rate of speed because of the tracks, switches and curves; that on the day in question those in charge of the car either in ignorance
The sanie cases are equally authority for the proposition that the question of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence was also for the jury. There is some dispute about the place at which the plaintiff first arose from her seat, and remained standing until she was finally thrown from the car, but giving her the benefit of every favorable intendment as the law requires upon this appeal, it may be fairly said that the jury could ■ well conclude that it was only as the car-approached the place at which she was about to alight that' she arose to her feet for that purpose. But she had an additional reason for-standing besides her purpose of leaving the car. The' seat upon which she was sitting was fully occupied and she had accordingly been obliged to place her little boy on the seat in front of her.. This was directly behind the motorman, and there the child was on his knees, peeking out over the windowsill, which is at the front: end of the open trolley cars, and watching the motions of the motorman, child-like. Twice the swaying of the car threw him from his: seat, The first time he “ would have been thrown out if there hadn’t been some one on the other end caught him from falling out. of the car.” After he was thrown down the second time,, and as the plaintiff was nearing the place where she expected the Car to-stop in accordance with custom, and in compliance with the informa
The judgment and order should be reversed.
All concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.