Boll v. Adirondack Railroad

4 N.Y.S. 769, 22 N.Y. St. Rep. 365, 52 Hun 610, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1705
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 N.Y.S. 769 (Boll v. Adirondack Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boll v. Adirondack Railroad, 4 N.Y.S. 769, 22 N.Y. St. Rep. 365, 52 Hun 610, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1705 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1889).

Opinion

Ingalls, J.

On the 24th day of July, 1888, the plaintiff was returning to her home from Saratoga Springs by the public highway. She was riding alone in a carriage drawn by one horse, which she was driving, and de [770]*770seended a considerable of a hill, which extended nearly to the crossing of the defendant’s railway. When nearly over such' crossing the carriage was struck by a hand-car running upon the track of the defendant’s road, in charge of the defendant’s servants, and the carriage was turned over, and the plaintiff was thrown out and injured. The plaintiff testified in her own behalf upon the trial, and, among other things, stated as follows: “I reside in the town of Greenfield, with my husband, John Boll. Have resided there about twenty-three years. Am about half a mile, or a little over, from the track of the Adirondack Railway Company; about three miles by the road from the village of Saratoga Springs. In coming home from the village I come by John Braham’s and others’, and by Judge Hilton’s park. I remember the day I was thrown out of my carriage; it was the 24th day of July, 1888. I had been to Saratoga on business; had a horse shod, and got some groceries. Started from home about two o’clock; started to come home about five o’clock. Went by Hilton’s park. Heard the noise of the train about a mile from home. Just before I got to Daniel’s place I heard a noise, and heard a whistle, and saw the train going to Saratoga on the Adirondack track. Saw it away from the village,—-from Boll’s crossing. It had passed by where I was hurt. I passed on, going home. There I turned up to the right around ■corner. You go at right angles. I think Daniel’s corner is less than a mile from the crossing where 1 was thrown out. When I came up near the railroad, I looked at the track up and down, and didn’t see nothing, and passed ■on. When I looked up and down, I was down below that little hill in the Jiollow. The hollow is a kind of a turn; a low place. It is near to Hilton’s -fence. There is a bend in the track where you went from the west fence, almost to the east fence; that is, before you come to the railroad track. I stopped in that hollow. I remember where the road bends from that point .to go nearly across. It bends in that hollow; that is, the hollow where I looked. When I got in that hollow, I looked both ways, and didn't see anything. and didn’t hear anything, and then I passed on. I listened; looked .both ways; I looked to the left on the railroad track, and then to right on the railroad track. It was before six o’clock,—pretty near six o’clock. I had ■seen the train go down. I don’t know whether there was any other train due about that time. That was always the last passenger train. I don’t know of any other. After I had looked both ways, and listened, at the little hollow, I passed right on. I didn’t see anything when I looked on the track, ■either way. I didn’t hear anything as I passed on. Was going on just a good walk. My horse was walking; he didn’t trot; he walked right on; a good gait; he didn’t walk fast. I couldn’t tell how fast he was going. I had been over three-quarters of an hour coming from the village. Started from there pretty near five o’clock, and it was then pretty near six o’clock. I went along until I got to the middle of the track, and heard a noise, and turned my head, and saw a hand-car and two men with full power working it; and I saw I couldn’t get back, and I struck the horse, and he went ahead. I thought, if I turned back, it might strike his feet; and after the horse went across I heard a shock, and that is all I know. I was thrown over to the right side, towards Hilton’s fence. I had the lines in my hands when I got struck. I don’t remember anything more after that. I was lying across the road next to the fence. I didn’t know anything first, and the railroad boys came up and says to me: ‘ Woman, I thought you was killed. It is a wonder you*was not killed.’ The other men coming this way took the horse, and straightened the horse up; and I sat there a few minutes on the ground, and then I crawled up on my hands and feet, and they brushed me off.”

The evidence shows that in descending the hill the view in the direction of the railway track was somewhat obstructed by trees, fence, and other objects. The witnesses differ in regard to the extent of such obstruction. The plaintiff stated that she listened, and looked in both directions along the track of [771]*771the railway, before she attempted to cross, and that she neither heard nor saw anything upon the track until the carriage was struck by the hand-car. The hand-car was running upon a down grade, and no force was applied by the men in charge to propel it. Michael Christopher, who was in the employment of the defendant, and upon this occasion had charge of the men and the work, testified: “On this occasion I was coming home to Saratoga after our day’s work with the men. We had been at work that day about a mile north of the trestle-work north or west up the track from Saratoga. There were five men with me. They are here. I started from a point about a mile up the track. Went down over this trestle-work spoken of. I first saw this woman with a horse and wagon just over half way from the rise of the hill on the main road coming towards the railroad crossing. She was over half way down. I was sitting in front on the hand-car, with one of the men with me; feet hanging off the platform. Saw her when she was more than half way down the hill. Could see her plainly. It was broad daylight, a little before six o’clock,—about ten minutes before six. There was nothing at all to obstruct my view of the woman, as 1 was there on the hand-car. I couldn’t tell at what rate she was driving. The horse was going about as slow as she wanted him to; a slow motion. I saw she looked, off and on, at us fellows, from the trestle-work. As near as I could judge, we were going about five miles an hour with the hand-car. There was no one working the handles there. It was a down grade. The handles hadn’t been worked at all from the time we started. There was no need of it, because it was all down grade. It worked itself. The car went by its momentum. There was another man with me, sitting down, and two men in the rear; two men standing up. I shouted to Mrs. Boll before I came within fifty feet of her to hold on the horse, and let us go by. She was then as much as ten feet from the railroad crossing. It seems she didn’t pay any attention to my call. She passed right along, and let the horse go. When we found she was going on the track, I hollered to the man that was on the brake, and told him to put on the brake as quick as he could, and he did it; did all we could to stop the car, and succeeded in stopping it, but not until after it hit the wagon.” It appears that this witness first saw the plaintiff when about half way down the hill, and approaching the crossing, and according to his evidence the car was running at the rate of five miles an hour. The car is described as three feet high, eight feet long, and five feet wide, and the top of the platform was one foot and seven inches above the rail. It was, we think, for the jury to determine, in view of all the circumstances, whether an object upon the track of the size and form described, and proceeding at the speed stated, with no working of the machinery by the men, and consequently causing but little noise or motion, would be likely to attract the attention of a person traveling, as the plaintiff was, upon the highway. Even though she had seen the car at some distance, she might have supposed it was a stationary object, as it was running at such moderate speed, and the men not working the brakes, or making any motions calculated to attract attention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 N.Y.S. 769, 22 N.Y. St. Rep. 365, 52 Hun 610, 1889 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boll-v-adirondack-railroad-nysupct-1889.