Berger v. Mayor of New York

65 A.D. 394, 73 N.Y.S. 74
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 65 A.D. 394 (Berger v. Mayor of New York) 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
Berger v. Mayor of New York, 65 A.D. 394, 73 N.Y.S. 74 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinions

Laughlin, J.:

This is an action for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff in • falling upon a sidewalk on one of the public streets of the city of Hew York, which, it is alleged, was in a dangerous and unsafe condition owing to ice and snow negligently allowed to accumulate and remain thereon by defendant. The accident occurred between the hours of eleven and twelve o’clock in the forenoon on the 20th day [396]*396of December, 1896. The day was cold, but the sun was shining. The accident occurred in the vicinity of the southeast corner of Stanton and Pitt streets, but there is a sharp conflict in the evidence as to whether it occurred on the southerly walk of Stanton street or on the easterly walk of Pitt street. The lot at this corner is occupied by a building referred to in the testimony as a grocery store, which extends out to the lines of the street, but at the time in question the store part of the building was unoccupied. The walks were level, constructed of stone, and no defect therein was charged or shown. On the day in question plaintiff, who resided at No. 84 Sheriff street, which is about a block and a half easterly and southerly of this corner, had been to the synagogue on Norfolk street, westerly of this corner and north of Stanton street. He was fifty-nine years of age, in good health, and apparently his eyesight ivas in normal condition for a man of that age. The route traveled by him in going to the synagogue is not shown.

The grounds upon which we are asked to grant a new trial are (1) that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence and the complaint should have been dismissed, and (2) that the verdict is against the weight of evidence.

The material evidence relating to the point of the accident, the con. dition of the walk, the care exercised by plaintiff, and the weather, is in substance as follows : The plaintiff testified that the weather had been cold for two weeks, and that there had been rain, and that he fell at the corner; that he had in his hands a prayer book and a “ talith,” and was walking right in the middle of the walk and did not see any ice until after he slipped and fell; that he then saw ice under the snow; that the whole corner was full of ice and snow about three or four inches thick, but he could not say exactly whether it was smooth or rough or lumpy; that if he had seen the ice he would have gone around it; that he fell about the second step he took on the ice and snow, and sustained a fracture of the thigh bone near the hip joint; that it last snowed the day before and the walk was clear everywhere except at that place; that there was only new snow on the walk and ice, but that in the street there was both old and new snow. An observer from the United States Weather Bureau, called by plaintiff, testifies that the records show that there was no snow until Monday, the fifteenth of December, [397]*397when there was only a trace which fell for four minutes, but that at nine-thirty-two p. m. sleet commenced falling, which turned into snow at eleven-eighteen p. m., and snow continued to fall until three-fifteen p. m. on Tuesday, the sixteenth, during which time seven and eight-tenths inches of snow fell; that there was no further snow until after the twentieth; that the temperature was below freezing all day the sixteenth, and on the seventeenth the highest temperature was thirty-six degrees and the lowest twenty-two, on the eighteenth the highest forty-four and the lowest twenty-eight, on the nineteenth the highest thirty-four and the lowest twenty-three, and the twentieth the highest thirty-two and the lowest twenty-four; that the records did not show at what times the temperature reached the maximum or minimum. He also testified that there could not be any ice before the fifteenth, because there was not any snow. A witness named Connor, whose business was peddling with a push cart on Stanton street, called by plaintiff, testified that he did not see the accident; that he was over these walks daily ; that there were pieces of ice frozen on the walk at the corner in question, and in answer to an inquiry as to how the ice came there he said it was raining and the frost came and a street cleaner on the Monday morning before the accident upset a barrel of German pickles, which he said were usually put up in brine or vinegar, on the sidewalk on Pitt street opposite a door into the store; that the pickles were picked up but that the water froze and that thereafter and on that and the following day he saw three or four people fall there and that he saw a policeman who was standing on the corner pick up a man who fell there on Tuesday; that he saw no one fall there on "Wednesday, Thursday or Friday; that the ice remained there two weeks (but it is evident that he did not mean that the ice had been there two weeks at the time of the accident), and that it snowed five or six days before the people fell. The plaintiff’s son testified that he arrived on the scene just as they were removing his father to the ambulance, and that this was in front of Ho. 108 Pitt street, opposite the door of a brick tenement house, but it may be that he has reference to the Pitt street door of the grocery building which, however, is given by another witness as Ho. 106; that his father was there in a chair in the middle of the walk near the corner; that there was smooth ice at that place covered by [398]*398snow; that “ the ice was about two square yards, but it was not all over; it was about a foot high, the ice, but not all over it, just only from the corner, and the center was about a foot high, the ice on the sidewalk * * * it was slanting * * * it slanted toward the house,” and that from the highest point it slanted towards the curb. This witness, after testifying that the ice was on Pitt street a few steps from the corner of Stanton street, “ about two feet — might be three ” from the corner, said that the ice was on Stanton street and further added, “I. am positive I had seen it there for a week and a half before — it might have been a week.” Mr. Greenburg, a corn merchant called as a witness for plaintiff, testified : “ It was in Stanton street; a piece of ice was on the sidewalk; it only covered where he fell; on the rest of the sidewalk was snow; that ice was, perhaps, one foot thick. ,Q. Was the ice level there, or was there a slant ? A. A slant—pieces. * * * I had seen the ice and snow there in the same condition it was in when the plaintiff fell; about two weeks it was there; I remember it had snowed from the heavens, perhaps four days before.” He further testified that there was snow and ice all over this sidewalk in front of this place ” and that plaintiff fell on the sidewalk on Stanton street. Another witness, a paperhanger named Mnfson, called by plaintiff, testified that prior to the eighteenth of December, and about the fifteenth or sixteenth, he saw a girl who was walking on the sidewalk at the corner of Stanton and Pitt streets with a pitcher in her hand fall down and break the pitcher and that a policeman helped her up; that there was ice on the walk and it had been there for two weeks, and in answer to a question calling for a description of the walk on December nineteenth and twentieth he said, “ Well, the sidewalk, was ice on the sidewalk; it was in chunks — pieces of ice there; on the sidewalk was snow.” He further testified that at the point where he saw the girl fall the ice was in the middle of the walk and about a foot thick; that the snow had been there for a few days and the ice about two weeks. He was then asked, Was.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Previdi v. City of New York
150 A.D. 135 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1912)
Owen v. City of New York
141 A.D. 217 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 A.D. 394, 73 N.Y.S. 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berger-v-mayor-of-new-york-nyappdiv-1901.