Judges: McLaughlin
Filed Date: 7/1/1905
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/26/2024
The plaintiff was a passenger on one of the defendant railway company’s cars and received personal injuries by its colliding with one of the defendant ice company’s wagons. He had a verdict for $1,000 against both of the defendants, on the ground that his injuries were caused by their joint negligence, and from the judgment entered thereon each defendant has separately appealed.
The facts, as developed by the testimony at the trial, are not complicated, It appeared that at about seven o’clock in the morning of September 3, 1901, the plaintiff entered one of the defendant’s north-bound cars at One Hundred and Tiventy-fifth street and Third avenue ; that he took a seat on the rear platform; that when the car was crossing One Hundred and Twenty-eigth street he was struck by the pole of the defendant ice company’s wagon ; that the driver of the ice wagon undertook to cross in front of the car; that he did not notice the car until it was about twenty feet from him, and, before he could stop, the pole of the wagon came in contact with a portion of the car, passed along the side of it until it came to the rear, when it struck the plaintiff and inflicted the injuries of which he complains. At the conclusion of the trial there was sufficient evidence to go to the jury on the negligence of the ice company. It was obligated to approach the crossing, having the wagon under control. This it did not do, as is evidenced by the fact that while the driver prevented a collision with the front, he was unable to do so as to the rear, of the car.
We have examined the errors alleged by the ice company, but none of them seem to be of sufficient merit to call for an interference with the judgment. So far as the ice company is concerned,
I think this was error; The defendant was entitled to have the jury instructed in the manner requested. The case was submitted to the jury upon a wrong theory and under erroneous instructions as to the legal relations of the parties. What, in effect, was said to the jury was that the burden of establishing the fact that the injuries to the plaintiff resulted from defendant’s negligence did not rest upon him, but it devolved upon the railway company to show affirmatively that it was free from negligence. The plaintiff asserted that his injuries were caused by the defendant’s negligence. The burden of establishing that fact rested upon him throughout the trial. He asserted it and he was bound to prove it. This is what the court was requested to charge, and which he refused.
It may be conceded that when the plaintiff proved that he was
Other errors are alleged by the railway company, but it is unnecessary to pass upon them inasmuch as they may not be committed on another trial.
The judgment, so far as the same relates to the railway company,, therefore, must be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs te appellant to abide event.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, Ingraham and Laughlin, JJ.f concurred.
As to the Metropolitan Street Railway Company, judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event; as' to the American Ice Company, judgment and order affirmed, with, costs.