Chace Trucking Co. v. Richmond Light & Railroad

173 A.D. 663, 160 N.Y.S. 326, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7643

This text of 173 A.D. 663 (Chace Trucking Co. v. Richmond Light & Railroad) 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
Chace Trucking Co. v. Richmond Light & Railroad, 173 A.D. 663, 160 N.Y.S. 326, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7643 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Davis, J.:

The plaintiff recovered a judgment for $778.81 damages for the loss of four horses.

Plaintiff was in the trucking business and was engaged in moving a certain piledriver from a pier at Clifton, S. I., to the works of the New York and Richmond Gas Company, at Stapleton, on February 23, 1909. For this purpose the plaintiff used two trucks and sixteen horses. The route followed in moving this piledriver was partly along Canal street to its intersection with Bay street, and thence along Bay street to the place of the accident. The defendant at that time was operating a two-track trolley line with overhead wires on Bay street. The feed wires with which the trolley car poles make connection are supported in position by span wires which in turn are attached to wooden poles at the side of the street. The feed wires are insulated from the span wires and the span wires carry an insulator before reaching' the pole. Owing to the weight and tension of the wires there is a sag near the feed wires over the center of the street, and thus there is a greater overhead clearance at the side of the street than in the middle.

On the day in question the truck carrying the piledriver was in charge of the plaintiff’s own employees. As the truck proceeded along its route the defendant’s employees followed with it accompanied by its emergency tower wagon. The overhead feed wires are strung over the center of the street. The top of the piledriver as it lay upon the truck was sixteen feet two inches from the street surface. While on Bay street, near Vanderbilt avenue, the piledriver came in contact with the defendant’s electric feed wire with the result that the electric current passed through the bodies of four of plaintiff’s horses [665]*665which were hauling the piledriver, killing them, and injuring four other horses, and to recover this damage this action was brought.

Andrew Hazelgreen for the plaintiff testified that he was foreman of the plaintiff and had charge of the men and horses engaged in transporting this piledriver; that he had sixteen horses in all attached to the truck with five men aiding him; that they drove ' along until they reached Bay street; that they were accompanied by the wrecking wagon of the Richmond Light and Power Company; that the man in charge of the wrecking wagon said that they were there to protect the plaintiff and to take care of the wires, and that he told the witness to keep to the right all the way down; that the wrecking wagon was right alongside plaintiff’s truck; that as they arrived at or near the trolley wires the wrecking crew raised the wires for them to pass under, the foreman of the wrecking crew telling them to go ahead and keep to the right, that everything was all right; that they then proceeded to Bay street on an up-grade, and got to a point where there was a big tree, with branches stretching out to the center wire; at the top of the hill they stopped and there was a bend in the road there; that at this point the foreman of the wrecking wagon said that everything was all right if they would keep to the right; this witness then stated as follows: “I said, ‘Now, this is going to turn around either one end or the other and strike that wire just as sure as you live when you are going down that hill.’ ” He said: ££ No, it ain’t. We are here. We will raise the wire up for you.” The witness further testified that at that point a clearance from the ground to the wire of about fifteen feet was needed, and the clearance looked to him to be fifteen feet. When the foreman told him that he was there and would raise the wires the witness said that during his conversation with the foreman, the foreman said: ££ Everything is all right; go.ahead.” The witness then testified that they used a little judgment before starting arid consulted with one another, and the wrecking crew told them to go ahead, that they were there and would protect them; that they started off keeping to the right and went right into the tree; that after going about fifteen feet the horses commenced to stumble; they went down one after [666]*666another; there were flashes, hair burning, and thereupon the wrecking crew came over and raised the wire up; that there was a curve right at the point where the accident happened. The witness said he did not know the distance between the trolley wires and the street, although the top of the piledriver was sixteen feet two inches from the ground, and that he told the foreman of the wrecking crew that such was the distance. On cross-examination the witness said that after the accident the forward wheel was near the trolley track and that the left rear wheel was four feet from the track; that the right wheel was about threó feet away from the curb and that the front right wheel was six feet from the curb; the witness did not see the trolley wire come in contact with the derrick at any place; that the team swung to the left in order to get away from the curb and that this happened at the moment of contact; the witness testified that the space between the curb and the nearest rail was ten or twelve feet. He further said that the foreman of the wrecking crew said it was all right, go ahead, and that he, the witness, then called his drivers together and consulted them, but they passed no opinion about it. Then the witness was asked this question: “Q. They did not say anything ? A. They didn’t think it right for to go under there.” The witness further said that he did not know anything about wires and did not know that if the truck came in contact with the feed wire there would be trouble. Then he changed this answer and said that he knew there would be trouble in that case. On redirect examination the witness said that the truck had to swing out from the curb to get away from the curb and the tree on account of the branches.

William Nelson, for the plaintiff, stated that he was a teamster and helped in driving the plaintiff’s truck at the time of the accident and that they got orders- to go ahead when they were on top of the hill at Bay street, the foreman of the defendant telling him to keep to the right, and that on account of the tree they had to swing the horses into the car track; that they could not be driven without swinging over to the car track on account of the bend in the road; that they went about fifteen feet and then the horses fell down; at this time one of the rear wheels of the truck was on the car track and the right-[667]*667hand rear wheel was about four feet from the curb and the truck was catty-cornered across the road.

Hugh Perry, for the plaintiff, testified that he was a driver working on the truck on the day of the accident and was seated on top; at the top of the hill on Bay street they came to a halt; he got word from the man in charge of the truck that everything was all right and they started down the hill near the curb; there was a tree there whose branches extended part of the way into the roadway as far as the wires; in order to clear it the truck had to swing out toward the tracks a little bit; that in turning the curb he swung his horses partly in the track and straddled the track part way until he got around the bend; he was driving eight horses at this time; he testified also that at the time of the accident one forward wheel was on the track and the other was astraddle of the two tracks on the left-hand side and the top of the piledriver was almost even with the center wire between the rails.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 A.D. 663, 160 N.Y.S. 326, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chace-trucking-co-v-richmond-light-railroad-nyappdiv-1916.