Burke v. State

64 Misc. 558, 119 N.Y.S. 1089
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedSeptember 15, 1909
DocketNos. 9392, 9393, 9394, 9396, 9399
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 64 Misc. 558 (Burke v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burke v. State, 64 Misc. 558, 119 N.Y.S. 1089 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Murray, J.

The above claimants seek to establish the responsibility of the State for the precipitation of the cars on the inclined railway at Hiagara Falls, on July 6, 1907, and to recover damages for the passengers who were in the cars at said time and suffered injury therefrom. The question of liability was tried in the above mentioned claims, and proof of the injuries received and of the loss sustained was offered in each case.

By the Laws of 1883, chapter 336, the State was authorized to acquire the property afterward known as Hew York State reservation at Hiagara, and, about July, 1885, it was opened to the public.

At the time of the acquisition of this property there was an inclined railway upon it, between the upper level of Prospect park and the edge of the water below. This railway was installed by the original owners in 1844 and, with some changes in the form of construction and material, but not in principle, has been operated ever since. It was constructed and had been operated about forty-two years before the State acquired the property.

The Public Lands Law, art. VII, provides: There shall continue to be a board known as the commissioners of the state reservation at Hiagara, consisting of five persons. * * * Such commissioners -shall have the control and. management of the state reservation at Hiagara, lay out, manage and maintain such reservation, and make and enforce ordinances, by-laws, rules and regulations necessary to effect the purpose thereof and for the orderly transaction of business. * * * Pay into the treasury of the state, on the first day of each month, all receipts and earnings of whatever nature. * * All such property shall be managed and controlled by the commissioners, and the rents, [560]*560issues and profits thereof shall be turned into the state treasury.”

After the State acquired this property, it continued to operate this inclined railway for the carriage of passengers for hire — charging five cents for transportation up or down the same. Signs were posted, Inclined railway, fare five cents each way.” Ticket offices were established at each end. Tickets were sold by employees of the State, and the amount of the fare charged was collected by them. These receipts were turned over to the superintendent of the reservation, as treasurer, and were deposited by him each day in a bank. At the end of each month they were remitted to the Comptroller of the State. A great number of persons were carried on this road each year. The incline receipts ” for the year ending September 30, 1906, were $12,971.40; and the average receipts from this railway were about $10,000 each year.

This inclined railway, as operated by the State on July 6, 1907, at the time of the accident hereafter described, consisted of two parallel tracks on which two cars were run, one car on each track. A large manila rope cable, three-quarters of an inch in diameter, passed from one car up the incline into the power-house at the top, around a large wheel, called a bullwheel, and then down to the other car. The machine turning the bullwheel runs one car up while the other car is ‘going down. In addition to the manila cable, which was the power cable, there was attached to each car a steel safety cable, seven-eighths of an inch in diameter. This steel cable passed from one car — the same as the manila rope — up the incline and round the safety carriage in the floor of the upper or power-house. The motor power, at the time of the accident, was electricity. In former years it had been water. Turning the motor in either direction would take one car up and the other car down; reversing the motor would reverse the direction of the cars. In the operator’s room was a large handbrake which operated on the bullwheel around which the manila cable passed. There was a handbrake on the safety carriage which worked automatically, also one which worked by hand.

There was only one cable or rope which went from car [561]*561to car over the bullwheel.' The rope which was ordered in 1906 was 330 feet long, from which eight or ten feet had been cut off.

The total length of the track was about 324 feet. The cars were 18 feet in length and weighed ahont 2,200 pounds without passengers.

The manila rope, which was attached to the cars, ran between the tracks, over a series of pulleys called idlers; these idlers were to keep the rope from wearing on the timbers of the track.

At the top of the track there was an iron sheave, or wheel, about two and one-half to three feet in diameter; when the rope reached this iron sheave it partially hent to change from a thirty-one degree incline to a horizontal. It then came in contact with a wooden sheave, then to another sheave of wood, and then passed partially around the circumference or goove of the bullwheel.

The bullwheel was six feet from face to face and was iron. From the bullwheel to the nearest sheave was six feet six and one-half inches. From the sheave to the next was five feet and one-half inch. The iron sheave was about ten feet from the next. The diameter of the sheave was about twenty inches. All the sheaves were of wood except the iron one.

Under each car there was a metal drum about fourteen or fifteen inches in diameter; it turned upon an axle and there were about twelve grooves around the surface of it. It was permanently attached to the car hy means of a cast iron shell or bracket which was for the purpose of sustaining the worm and holding it in a fixed position on the car. The safety cable was wrapped around this drum three to five times and fastened to it. The end of the steel cable passed through the drum, then through a wrought iron collar; and the screw set into the cable to make it fast. This drum was turned either way by use of a worm; on the end there was a wheel similar to a brake wheel on a freight car. When the worm was turned it caused the drum to turn at right angles to the turn of the worm and the steel cable to be tightened or loosened.

[562]*562The drum was cast iron and hollow. It was broken at the time of the accident; and, if the cable parted, most of the strain would come on the shell supporting the worm.

There was no brakeman on the cars.

The metal cable, which was wound three or four times around the drum, ran out underneath the car, up the incline, over two sets of idlers on the track to prevent its wearing, and under the floor of the operating room at the top of the incline. When it reached this room it went over idlers or sheaves to change it from a thirty-one degree incline to a horizontal. It then touched a sheave which was on a device which ran on a truck called a tension carriage.

The wire cable then went around this sheave attached to the tension carriage, and then over other sheaves to change its direction and down the track to the other car.

The tension carriage ran on wheels on two horizontal tracks. Its purpose was to keep the metal cable from slacking, and on it was a wheel or sheave with a groove in the center over which the steel cable passed. This tension carriage was held back a certain distance by a system of buffers or bumpers which were fastened to the back of the carriage and went over a couple of sheaves and then up and through a partition and a drum again, with weights attached to the lower end of the rope to keep the tension taut. In front of the carriage was a sliding brake shoe which was to act against the face of the sheave.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 Misc. 558, 119 N.Y.S. 1089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burke-v-state-nyclaimsct-1909.