Boyce v. Town of Shawangunk

40 A.D. 593, 58 N.Y.S. 26
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 40 A.D. 593 (Boyce v. Town of Shawangunk) 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
Boyce v. Town of Shawangunk, 40 A.D. 593, 58 N.Y.S. 26 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Putnam, J.:

On the morning of the 9th of April, 1898, the plaintiff while proceeding with a load of hay drawn by a pair of oxen along a highway in the town of Shawangunk, Ulster county, N. Y., came to a bridge on said highway. He had made a seat of two boards in front of and projecting from the wagon about two feet, at the bottom of the hay, and seated thereon he attempted to cross the bridge. "While he was in the act of so crossing, some portion of the westerly abutment off [595]*595the structure towards which he was driving gave way and fell, causing a hole in the highway at the edge of the bridge into which the forward wheel of the wagon fell, and the plaintiff was thrown off and sustained severe injuries, to recover damages for which this action is brought.

The usual questions are raised on this appeal: Was the defendant’s highway commissioner negligent in failing to repair the abutment? Did the plaintiff establish the absence of contributory negligence on his part ? Were the damages awarded to the plaintiff by the verdict for an excessive amount ?

We will consider first whether the evidence permitted a finding by the jury that the defendant’s highway commissioner was negligent in omitting to repair the abutment, the fall of which caused the accident.

That the abutment was in a dangerous condition at the time cannot be doubted; and from facts hereinafter adverted to, it must have been unsafe for some considerable period before it fell.

It was not necessary for the plaintiff to show actual notice to the commissioner of the unsafe condition of the abutment, if the circumstances were such that ignorance on his part was in itself negligence. (Hover v. Barkhoof, 44 N. Y. 113.) It was the duty of the defendant’s highway commissioner to inspect the roads and bridges in the town ; to exercise vigilance in that regard. (Mackey v. The Town of Locke, 28 N. Y. St. Repr. 281; Embler v. Town of Wallkill, 57 Hun, 384; 132 N. Y. 222, 227.) If the commissioner failed to exercise such vigilance, and hence to discover the unsafe condition of the abutment, which would have been apparent to him on a careful examination thereof, his ignorance of its condition was in itself negligence within the meaning of Hover v. Barkhoof (supra.)

It was shown on the trial that Mr. Hardenbergh, commissioner of highways of the defendant, received some notice of the unsafe condition of the bridge shortly before the accident, and that he and Mr. Ronk, a former highway commissioner of the town, on the previous nineteenth day of March had examined it. Mr. Hardenbergh testified that the abutment in question was then seemingly in good condition. Mr. Ronk also testified that, in his judgment, the abutment was then safe enough, although subsequently, in answer to the question “ When you left it you considered it safe?” He said, “Yes, sir, [596]*596safe enough to stand until it fell down.” Had there been no other evidence tending to show negligence on the part of the highway ■commissioner except the testimony of the present and former commissioner of highways, as above stated, that on complaint of the ■condition of the bridge they shortly before the accident went and ■examined it, and the abutment that afterwards fell appeared safe, it would have been difficult to sustain the finding of the jury. But Mr. Hardenbergh, after his attention was called to the bridge, was bound not only to inspect the abutment, but to make a careful examination thereof. I think the evidence was such as to allow a finding by the jury that he failed to make a proper examination — failed to exercise active vigilance. Mr. Bonk, in regard to the examination of the abutment made on the nineteenth of March preceding the accident, testified as follows : At this time we did not examine the abutment very closely. We stood off four or five feet, took off some plank and looked at it. I did not give it much attention. He thought it would go. He thought it was safe and would go all night. It stood up all right at that time.” Mr. Hardenbergh, after stating on his examination that he and Bonk reached the conclusion that the abutment was safe, by simply passing within a few feet of it, and that that was all the examination ever made of the abutment at that time, or any 'other time, testified as follows : I thought at the time that all that was necessary to do in order to discover whether there are any defects in the abutments to a bridge was to jiass along 2 or 3 feet from it and glance at it as I could, but I think different now. I had only been commissioner nine days. I think now they need a little closer inspection. Since this .accident happened, I think that it probably would have been better to have made a closer inspection of that abutment. I don’t know as I reached this conclusion from the examinations that I made of the abutment after it fell. I didn’t see but a little bit of what had fallen.”

It appears, therefore, that the abutment of the bridge, on the 9th day of April, 1898, when plaintiff was injured, was unsafe; that Mr. Hardenbergh and Mr. Bonk examined the bridge on the precéding nineteenth of March. The testimony ¡permitted the jury to find that they did not make a careful or thorough inspection, as Mr. Hardenbergh practically concedes in his testimony.

[597]*597But there was other evidence in the case which, if credited, allowed the jury to find that there were apparent defects in the abutment which, on a diligent and careful examination, the highway commissioner would have detected. The witness Cruver examined the bridge a year before the trial (October 5, 1898), or within two years, and testified in regard to the abutment as follows: “ It looked to me as if the one corner of the bridge on the right-hand side was cobble stones," and as if it was very near falling down. It looked about as if it was to fall, and I was really afraid of it. The stones were not very large — looked to be like cobble stones — not very good stones to build an abutment. * * * Yes, sir; it looked unsafe to me. I was led to this belief because some of the stones had fallen out in under the piece where those stringers went across the sill; some of the stones had fallen out under the sill, and more of them looked as if they were just about ready to fall out the minute you went on to them, and I was very careful about going over it.” Mr. Bonk testified as follows in regard to the abutment:. It was laid up dry; no very large stones; small stones, not very large; there were some pretty decent sized stones. It was a rough abutment on the side towards Ulsterville-—mo mason work. The stones were laid up loose, one upon another to the top, and there were .some sticks stuck in also. I suppose thqy were put in to hold the stones together. Well, at that time, I thought it looked kind of mean standing there in that shape and a nice abutment put up on the other side — nice mason work. It looked safe enough ; I couldn’t say nothing against it — only that it was laid up with loose stones and with sticks into it.” He inspected the abutment the morning of the accident and said in regard to it: “I stood right on the bank and looked right down at it. It was made up of not very large stone. The sticks that had been laid in at the time the abutment was put up to keep the stones up were rotten where they went back in the ground. Q. Did that cause the abutment to give way ? A. I think it had something to do with it. I wouldn’t swear positively what made it go down. It might have been something else.

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Boyce v. Town of Shawangunk
60 N.Y.S. 1133 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1899)

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Bluebook (online)
40 A.D. 593, 58 N.Y.S. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyce-v-town-of-shawangunk-nyappdiv-1899.