86 N.Y.S. 845 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
Conrad Wolpers, Jr., on the morning of the 22d of January, 1903, between six-thirty-five and seven o’clock, was driving a covered batcher wagon through Jackson avenue, Long=Island City. When he reached a point about opposite the court house his horse, fell upon his knees and upon being pulled up by the reins the horse refused to respond. Wolpers jumped out of the wagon over the forward wheel for the purpose of ascertaining what was the trouble with his horse, when he came in contact with a grounded wire of the defendant, receiving a shock which rendered him unconscious. When found the wire lay across his breast and appeared to be held in one of the hands of Wolpers, and witnesses describe it as burning when it was removed by a letter carrier, who protected himself by using a newspaper to take hold of the wire. There is no dispute that -this wire belonged to the defendant; that it was one of the wires used in transmitting an electric current for light and power, and that it was carrying a voltage of 2,000 volts, the lines crossing the street and over the trolley wires of one of the local street surface railroads. The plaintiff was unable to tell anything about the accident farther than, that when he jumped out of the wagon his foot came in contact with this wire; that he felt it tingle like needles in his feet and all over him, and that he then became unconscious. There were no eye-witnesses of the accident at the moment of the contact, although it would appear from the fact that only the right hand of the plaintiff was injured, and this only as to two or three fingers, that he must have been discovered almost immediately after the contact, and there was no room to doubt the cause of the injury, for the wire was in his hand when discovered, although he testifies that he has no recollection of seeing the wire or having taken hold of it. The case was submitted to the jury, resulting in a verdict for $5,000, and from the judgment entered appeal comes to this court.
The defendant on this appeal apparently concedes that the falling of the wire raises a presumption of negligence on its part, but it is urged that this was fully rebutted by the testimony in the case bearing upon the question of the defendant’s care in inspecting and repairing the lines, its use of the customary materials and the general system commonly used for like purposes. It is true that the
The criticism is made that the plaintiff had no specific ground of negligence to urge, but in our view of the case the plaintiff was not obliged to point out the specific cause of the accident. It was sufficient if he proved facts and circumstances from which the jury might fairly infer that the wire was either defective in its construction or negligently operated. (Peck v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 165 N. Y. 347, 351, and authorities there cited.) This, in the absence of a satisfactory explanation, would sustain a recovery by plaintiff, and the jury had the responsibility of determining upon the sufficiency of the explanation offered. It is true, as suggested by the defendant, that if the proof of the defendant rebutted any presumption of negligence, or left the fact of negligence in doubt, the plaintiff would have no right to recover, as suggested in Kay v. Metropolitan Street Ry. Co. (163 N. Y. 447), but this is a matter for the jury, as was determined in the case cited. “ The jury,” says the court, “ were bound to put the facts and circumstances proved by the defendant into the scale against the presumption upon which the plaintiff relied, and in determining the weight to be given to the former as against the latter, they were bound to apply the rule
The suggestion that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, because he was found with the wire between his fingers, is hardly tenable under the evidence in this case. The rule is that while the plaintiff is bound to establish his freedom from negligence contributing to the accident, if all the circumstances under which the injury was received are proved, and the evidence excludes fault on the part of the plaintiff, and there was nothing in the conduct of the plaintiff, either of acts or of neglect, to which the injury might be attributed in whole or in part, due care may be inferred from the absence of all appearance óf fault. (Hilton v. Boston, 171 Mass. 478, 480, and authorities there cited.) The plaintiff was the only witness of the accident; his story is wholly uncontradicted, and there is no fact or circumstance stated which could justify an inference of negligence on his part. His horse had fallen down ; he was unable to bring him into action with the reins. He stepped down to the ground in the early morning light, with no reason to expect electric lighting wires to be in his way, and came in contact with the wire with his feet, receiving the shock which rendered him unconscious. That he may have grabbled this wire in his fall, or even that he may have come in contact with it with his hand on reaching the ground, is not evidence of negligence, under the evidence in this case, and the jury very properly exonerated him upon this branch of the case.
We have examined the matters to which our attention is further called, but have not found error justifying reversal of this judgment.
' The judgment and order appealed from should he affirmed, with costs.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.