36 A.D. 265 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
The action is for damages for personal injuries. The plaintiff was a passenger on one of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company’s cars. This defendant has a single track on Houston street,, in the city of New York, on which it propels cars by horses. Houston ■ street crosses the Bowery substantially at right angles. The latter is a broad thoroughfare. Along the Bowery are four-tracks, two operated by the Third Avenue Railroad Company and the other two by the Fourth Avenue Railroad Company. The Third Avenue Railroad ears at the time of the accident were all operated by cable. As the horse car on which the plaintiff was riding was proceeding across the intersection of the westerly track of the Third Avenue railroad it was struck by one of the cars of the latter company with sufficient violence to throw it from the track.. By this collision the plaintiff was thrown to the floor of the car and received the injuries for which she brings suit.
We think the issue of negligence as to each of the defendants was for the jury, and that the motions to dismiss the complaint were properly denied. It may be that just before the collision the horse-car was so near the point of intersection, as compared with the position of the cable car, that the horse car had the prior right to cross the intersection. But if this view of the situation be accepted, it would not necessarily relieve the Metropolitan Company from liability. The evidence tended to show that the cable car was moving toward the intersection at a rapid rate of speed, and that there was-no appearance of any intention or disposition to check or stop that speed before the car reached the crossing. While it may be that the horse car had the superior right of way on account of its position, still the Crossing was necessarily a place -of some danger: and if care-on the part of the driver of the horse car would have informed him that the cable car was proceeding in violation of his priority, and that such conduct would put the passengers of the horse car in jeopardy, he was bound out of regard for the safety of his passengers to sacrifice his own right of way. From this point of view the evidence was sufficient to charge both defendants with negligence, and the verdict of the jury Was warranted.
The principal propositions of law in the charge of the trial court, of which the appellants complain and on account of which they seek
At the request of the Third Avenue Railroad Company the court charged: “ That the defend ant, the Metropolitan Street Railway Company., with respect to carrying plaintiff, was bound to exercise all the ■care and skill which human prudence and foresight can suggest to secure her safety at the crossing at Houston street, while the Third Avenue Railroad Company was bound to use only ordinary care in the management of its cable car there; and if the jury finds that the gripman of the cable car used ordinary and reasonable care under the •circumstances, the Third Avenue Railroad Company cannot be held liable in this action.” To so much of this instruction as dealt with the measure of care which the Metropolitan Street Railway Company was bound to exercise, that company excepted. The learned ■counsel for that defendant insists that this charge imposed upon it greater diligence than the law requires. We do not feel it requisite to follow the counsel in his extended argument, as we regard the
The Metropolitan Company asked the court to charge: “ If the gripman of the Third avenue cable car, when 75 feet, north of the Avenue C tracks, then saw the horse car approaching through Houston street, the track on which his soutlnbound car was moving, it was negligence on his part in not stopping his car in time to avert the accident.” To this the court responded: “ I charge that with this qualification; if under all the circumstances of the . case as they appear from the testimony he could have so done, then it was.’.’ To this charge as modified the Third Avenue Company excepted. It is urged that the court here erred, and the .criticism is made.,on the charge that the question was not whether the gripman could have stopped his car, but whether he should have stopped his car. We are of opinion that, taking this request in connection with the previous charge of the court, and its action on the requests to* charge made to it by the various' parties, it did not import that it was negligence for the driver to fail to stop his car when seventy-five feet away from the intersection if at that time he saw a car approaching on the Houston - street track, for such instruction would be simply nonsense. If at the time the gripman saw the horse car approaching, the horse car was many hundred feet away, of course there would be no jrropriety in stopping the cable car. The trial court had already refused to charge a substantially siniilar request, predicated on the cable car being thirty feet or more from the intersection. It could not have intended to lay down ; any more stringent rule when the car was seventy-five feet from the crossing. The fair purport of the instruction as we construe it is that if the grip-man should and could have stopped his car when seventy-five feet away, then it was negligent of him not to . have done so. If there was any danger of the jury misunderstanding the court in' this
The father of the plaintiff was a witness' on her behalf. He testified that she had been well before the accident and confined to her bed since. On cross-examination he was asked if he had not brought a suit against the defendants for the loss of the plaintiff’s services. This question .was objected to and the objection sustained., We think the. trial court erred in excluding this evidence, and that it should have permitted the question to be answered. It is always competent to show the interest or bias of a witness. (Matter of Snelling, 136 N. Y. 515; Garnsey v. Rhodes, 138 id. 461.) But the error was harmless. (People v. Brooks, 131 id. 321.) The father technically had not an interest in the recovery in this action. The judgment in this action could not be put in evidence in any action the father might bring. It was doubtless competent to show bias on the part of the witness, though he had no technical interest in the recovery. But the witness did not pose as disinterested. He testified that he was the father of the plaintiff, and she a member of his family dependent on him for support. At the request of one of the defendants the court instructed the jury that the father had a right of action for the loss of the plaintiff’s services, and that he, not the plaintiff, could recover. for the expenses of her illness; so the jury were informed that if the father had not brought an action, still he might bring one. It seems to us that proof that the witness had brought suit would show no substantial increase in the bias under which he must necessarily and apparently have labored as father of
The defendants called as a witness a physician who had attended the plaintiff during an illness previous to the accident in'-suit. He testified that at the time of his attendance the plaintiff was suffering from peritonitis. He was asked if he could tell the cause of that peritonitis, to which.he replied in the affirmative. He was then asked to state the cause. This he refused to answer. The plaintiff waived all question of privilege, and the defendants asked the court to instruct the witness that he must Answer. The court declined to give such instruction, so the question as to the cause of the peritonitis remained unanswered. To the ruling of the court the defendants excepted. The confidence between physician and patient, and the privilege which forbids a physician disclosing knowledge concerning his patient, acquired by virtue of his professional relations, is the privilege and confidence of the patient, not that of the physician. Therefore, when the plaintiff waived her privilege, the court could properly have compelled the witness to answer as to the cause of the plaintiff’s disease. But there is nothing to show that the answer . to the interrogatory Would have been in any way material to the cause, nor did the defendants’ counsel state what they expected would be the hearing of the testimony. It was claimed that the plaintiff was suffering from myelitis and locomotor ataxia. Through cross-examination the defendants’ counsel had developed the fact that one of the most common causes of such diseases is constitutional syphilis. Any evidence to show that the plaintiff had had syphilis, or .suffered from the inherited results of such malady, would have been material, and also competent, if it could be obtained without. violating the privilege which guards against the disclosure by a physician of the condition of his patient. • This privilege the plaintiff had waived. But there is not a suggestion that syphilis was the cause of the peritonitis, or that it is a possible cause of that disease. Unless the cause of the peritonitis had some relation to or hearing upon the malady from which it was alleged the plaintiff suffered at the time of- the trial, an inquiry into that subject was wholly immaterial.
Complaint is also made of the permission given by the court on ' the trial to the plaintiff to amend her claim for damages by increas
The judgment and orders appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event, unless, the plaintiff stipulates to reduce the recovery of damages to $10,000, with extra allowance proportionately, in which ease the judgment as reduced should be affirmed, without costs of this appeal to either party.
Judgment and orders reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event, unless within twenty days plaintiff stipulates to reduce recovery of damages to $10,000, and extra allowance proportionately, in which case the judgment as reduced, is unanimously affirmed, without costs of this appeal to either party.