Citation Numbers: 251 A.D. 890, 297 N.Y.S. 336, 1937 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8181
Filed Date: 7/2/1937
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/27/2024
Action by a wife to recover damages sustained through the alleged negligence of the defendant and by her husband to recover for loss of services, etc. Appeal by the defendant from a judgment entered in favor of the plaintiffs. Judgment in favor of the plaintiffs reversed on the law, with costs, and complaint dismissed, with costs. Although the facts concerning the cracked window and the jerk of the train were adduced not on plaintiff wife’s direct, but on her cross-examination, they were a part of plaintiffs’ case and the decision of the Court of Appeals herein (270 N. Y. 409) that the rule res ipsa loquitur does not apply is again applicable. By the bill of particulars and complaint, as amended, the claim of negligence was that defendant, with notice, actual or implied, permitted the window glass to be in a loose and unfastened condition and because of that condition and a jerk of the car it fell upon her. Upon this trial plaintiff wife and her witness testified merely that the glass fell upon plaintiff. But this was not her whole story; it was not the whole truth, since she pleaded that the glass had been negligently maintained, in a loose and unfastened condition, and on a prior trial she and her witness testified that they observed, before it fell, that the window pane was cracked. Cross-examination unsealed her lips to relate the balance of her story in accordance with her claim and the facts. The testimony thus elicited was a part of her case. One of the objects of this cross-examination was to develop the whole truth as to a situation which had been only partly developed on the direct examination. Plaintiffs are in the same position they were in before the Court of Appeals. Upon three trials plaintiffs have failed to prove defendant had notice of the crack in the glass essential to the liability of the defendant, as held by the Court of Appeals. It would be useless to order a new trial. Lazansky, P. J., Johnston, Adel and Taylor, JJ., concur; Hagarty, J., dissents and votes to affirm, with the following memorandum: Plaintiffs’ proof,