Citation Numbers: 56 A.D. 187
Judges: Rumsey
Filed Date: 7/1/1900
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/28/2024
The plaintiff, while crossing Broadway near Grand street, was struck by a car of the defendant going down town. Her testimony and that of her witnesses tended to show that she was crossing the street under the escort of a policeman; she was just about to step off the western-most rail of the south-bound track, but had not done so, when her progress was impeded by a wagon, which came between her and the sidewalk, and she was unable to get off the rail until the defendant’s car had struck her. The evidence of the defendant tended to prove that she was crossing with the police-' man; that the gripman had slowed up in response to a signal of the policeman to let them cross the track; that the policeman and the plaintiff had stepped off the track and were entirely clear of the rails, and the gripman, supposing that they were out o.f the way,
There can be no doubt that the policeman was escorting the plaintiff across the street when the accident occurred. The plaintiff testified substantially that she never stepped off the track, but that before she got across it her progress was impeded by the wagon, which turned into the street and was driven between the car and the curb, towards which-the plaintiff and the policeman were proceeding. So upon the evidence the jury might have found that the policeman had gone entirely over the tracks and was clear of the rails while the plaintiff was still upon them.
The court charged the jury that the claim of the plaintiff was that she and the policeman were on the tracks, and that the grip-man, without the exercise of reasonable care to stop his car, struck them and knocked them down, and he submitted the question whether that contention was sustained by the evidence, calling attention to the testimony of the defendant, which tended to show that the policeman and the plaintiff had both left the track and passed beyond it a sufficient distance to justify the gripman in resuming his course, upon the supposition that the car was not likely to strike them, and he told the jury particularly that the issue of fact was -whether they had left the-track, as the testimony of the defendant’s witnesses tended to prove, or whether they were still within the • line of the rails, and the gripman, without reasonable care, struck them and knocked them down,
The judge was asked to charge that “ The gripman was not bound to anticipate that the policeman, having once crossed the track, would- step back into a place of danger, and the gripman had a right to assume that, having once crossed the track, if you so find, the policeman would remain in a place of safety,” and, also, “ If the policeman stepped back six feet in front of the car and too near to avoid an accident, while this would not be contributory negligence attributable to the plaintiff, yet she could not succeed in this suit, because in that' case it would become an unavoidable accident so far as the railroad is concerned, and there could be no recovery.”
The court refused these requests, and this refusal is alleged as
It is claimed that the verdict is excessive. The testimony shows that after the accident the plaintiff suffered from very serious injuries. It is claimed that the evidence .shows that some of the diseases which she had after the accident she had also had before she was hurt. 'Whether that were true or not was for the jury to say.. It appears.from the testimony of Dr. Pierce that although she had had previously some of the diseases which manifested themselves after the accident, yet she had recovered from them, and the
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.