Ackerman v. Fifth Avenue Coach Co.

175 A.D. 508, 162 N.Y.S. 49, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10430
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 8, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 175 A.D. 508 (Ackerman v. Fifth Avenue Coach Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ackerman v. Fifth Avenue Coach Co., 175 A.D. 508, 162 N.Y.S. 49, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10430 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

At about eight o’clock in the evening on the 14th day of June, 1914, the plaintiffs in these actions were walking down Fifth avenue on the easterly side, and as they passed over the carriageway at the intersection of East Ninetieth street with Fifth avenue and stepped over the curb onto the sidewalk at the southeasterly corner of Fifth avenue and East Ninetieth street they were struck and injured by an automobile which, according to the answers of the defendants Jackson and Becker, was owned by the defendant Becker and was being operated by the defendant Jackson as the chauffeur, coming northerly on Fifth avenue, and at a point some thirty feet south of the south[510]*510erly curb line of East Ninetieth street had turned to the right onto the sidewalk and was passing diagonally toward the northeast over the sidewalk at the southeasterly corner of East Ninetieth street and Fifth avenue. The defendants Jackson and Becker were charged with negligence with respect to the operation of the automobile. They defaulted upon the trial and a verdict was rendered against them. The appellant operates stages or busses for hire on Fifth avenue and' elsewhere in the city of Greater New York. The theory upon which recovery has been had against it is that one of its busses, which was running on Fifth avenue north of Ninetieth street and at about the time of the accident had come south on Fifth avenue and was turning about at Ninetieth street to go north, was so negligently operated that it cut off the passageway of the automobile which was proceeding northerly on Fifth avenue and forced the chauffeur, who was in charge of the automobile, to turn onto the sidewalk to avoid a collision with the bus. The learned counsel for the appellant contends, among other things, that there is no evidence of negligence on the part of the chauffeur of the bus and that if there be any evidence of negligence on his part it was not the proximate cause of the injuries to the plaintiffs. The automobile was a public vehicle. It is to be inferred from the evidence that it was hired by Max Fishel for he invited James Albes for a ride at between tw© o’clock and two-thirty p. M. that day. The automobile party consisted of the chauffeur, which the evidence tends to show was Becker but, as already observed, the pleadings of the individual defendants show was Jackson, and Fishel and his two sisters",- and Mr. and Mrs. Levine, and a Levine child about two years of age, and Albes. The Levines had alighted from the automobile at Eighty-fifth street and at the time of the accident the automobile was proceeding northerly on Fifth avenue to the residence of Fishel which was No. 509 West One Hundred and Seventieth street. The only occupants of the automobile who were called as witnesses were Albes, who sat in front to the left of the chauffeur, and Fishel, who sat between his sisters on the rear seat, and his sister Oecelia, who was seated on the rear seat at the right. There is some conflict in the evidence with respect to the time of the accident. [511]*511Fishel says it occurred about seven o’clock, but the other evidence tends to show that it was a few minutes before eight o’clock; and the evidence is uncontroverted that it was a clear, pleasant evening, and that it was still sufficiently light to see objects plainly. There is no substantial conflict in the evidence either with respect to the speed of the automobile or the speed at which the bus was going in making the turn. The express evidence is to the effect that the automobile was going from eight to ten miles an hour and that the bus in making the turn was moving a little faster than a man ordinarily walks or at about four miles an hour. One of the witnesses gives the speed of the automobile as that of a trolley car between crossings or of a horse as ordinarily driven on the public streets, and he says that the automobile was moving “ a little bit faster” than the bus; but the preponderance of the evidence shows the speed of the respective vehicles about as I have stated. Albes testified that as they approached Ninetieth street he observed two or three busses at the northwesterly comer of Ninetieth street and Fifth avenue; and that “while we approached Ninetieth street one of the stages just turned and cut us off,” leaving no room for the automobile to pass; and that to avoid striking the bus the chaffeur turned toward the sidewalk and applied more power, giving more speed to the automobile, and that the automobile ran into the plaintiffs; that the automobile, when it turned onto the sidewalk, was within about two feet of the bus, and that the line of travel of the automobile was within about one foot of the easterly curb of Fifth avenue; that when the automobile was at Eighty-ninth street the “ stage was in Ninetieth” street, and that before the automobile reached Ninetieth street “the stage come from uptown and made the turn and just cut us off; ” that the bus made a turn in front of the automobile; that when the automobile turned onto the sidewalk the bus was at the comer of Ninetieth street about two feet in front of the automobile, and that the front wheels of the bus were about two feet from the sidewalk and the back wheels were about twenty feet from the walk; that when the automobile was at Eighty-ninth street the bus was turning around at Ninetieth street; and that when the automobile neared Ninetieth street the bus was not headed east and west [512]*512but had turned north, and that if the automobile had continued in its course it would have run in between the bus and the curb and not into the rear of the bus; that the chauffeur was nervous as was the witness, and that after the automobile went upon the sidewalk he endeavored to have the chauffeur stop it and that the chauffeur reduced the speed but jumped from the automobile after it left the sidewalk and turned easterly into Ninetieth street, about twenty-five to thirty feet from the corner, and that the witness jumped from the automobile about the same time, and that the automobile with the others in it continued on, and that the bus was about four feet from the automobile when he first saw it. There is a conflict in the evidence with respect to the distance the automobile went after the accident before it stopped. Some of the testimony tends to show that it continued on until it struck a lamp post on the southerly side of East Ninetieth street, one hundred and eighty-three feet six inches easterly of Fifth avenue, and other testimony indicates that it came to a stop in the carriageway of East Ninetieth street, about sixty or seventy or one hundred feet east of Fifth avenue. Fishel testified that the automobile came to a stop before he and the chauffeur and Albes alighted therefrom; and that although he was looking north he did not see the bus at all and did not hear any bell or signal from it; and his sister testified that she. saw the bus coming and became very excited and frightened; that “ the bus was coming right close to us, coming right into us; ” and she indicated the distance the bus was from the automobile when she first saw it as about three or four feet. On cross-examination she said that the bus was backing toward the automobile and that the first thing she saw was the back of the bus “coming towards us.” There is no other testimony or evidence in the case indicating that the bus backed up or that it came to a stop while making the turn. E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 A.D. 508, 162 N.Y.S. 49, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ackerman-v-fifth-avenue-coach-co-nyappdiv-1916.