Comstock v. Village of Schuylerville

139 A.D. 378, 124 N.Y.S. 92, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2203
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 29, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 139 A.D. 378 (Comstock v. Village of Schuylerville) 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
Comstock v. Village of Schuylerville, 139 A.D. 378, 124 N.Y.S. 92, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2203 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Smith, P. J,:

About nine o’clock upon the evening of December 17, 1906, this plaintiff fell upon a crosswalk in the defendant village. For the iiijuries sustained by that fall she seeks to charge defendant in damages. This case has been examined with especial care, by reason of its importance, and of the fact that we were not aided by the oral argument of counsel, and also, by reason of the contention of defendant’s counsel that his case was prejudiced by bias on the part of the-trial judge. T do not find in the case any basis whatever for this' charge. There is nothing in the reeord which indicates other [380]*380than an impartial and fair trial to the defendant, of which the defendant has no other cause of complaint than certain rulings upon questions of law, which will be later discussed.

Nor can I agree with defendant’s counsel that the notice of injury is not sufficient to support the claim made by the plaintiff upon the trial. Two criticisms are made of this notice. First, that the time is stated as “ on or about the 17tli day of December, 1906, at about 8:45 o’clock p. m. ; ” and the place “ at a point in the sidewalk of said Main street, and on the west side thereof, and at the intersection thereof with Grove street, and about in the middle of said Grove street.” The defendant’s contention that the time.is insufficiently stated- finds some support in the' case of Lee v. Village of Greenwich (48 App. Div. 391). That case was decided by this department, and in the opinion it is stated that a notice of an injury “ on or about” a certain date is too indefinite as to time. In that case, however, the injury'is stated to have occurred simply upon a certain street, without designating where upon that street. The notice was, therefore, held defective, both as to the time and place. As far as that decision may be deemed a holding that a statement off time as “on or about” a certain.date renders the notice defective, we think it should be overruled, especially where the injury is sho.wn to have occurred .upon the' date named. It is not necessary here to decide what latitude should be given by the courts to the expression “on or about.” That probably should-be for the trial court to determine under the peculiar circumstances of each case, having in view the extent to which the indefiniteness of the expression may have misled the municipal authorities. The criticism of the notice as to the place of the accident is not so much a criticism • of the notice itself as that it is made the basis of a claim that plaintiff’s attempt to recover for a fall upon the northerly end of the crosswalk, from four to six feet therefrom, is not authorized by this notice. The street is fifty feet wide. The specification as to the place of the accident is not strictly accurate, as it was attempted ■ thereafter to be proven by-the plaintiff. I think the notice, however, might fairly be deemed a warning to the village to examine the condition of the crosswalk between the' curbs, and to authorize a recovery for an injury caused within that space, especially in the absence of a request by the municipality for a submission to the [381]*381jury of the question "as to whether the municipality was misled thereby.

As to the rulings upon the trial challenged by the defendant, mention will be made only of one specific ruling. The plaintiff claimed negligence on the part of the village in allowing lumps and ridges of ice to be and remain upon the crosswalk, claiming that her injuries were caused thereby. The evidence is undisputed to the effect that it rained somewhat upon the afternoon and at seven o’clock in the evening of the day of the accident; that late in the day it began to get colder and froze up in the evening and night. James E. Bennett was called as a witness for the defendant. He passed over this sidewalk the next morning, and was asked to state its condition with reference to any lumps or ridges there. This was objected to by the plaintiff’s counsel, because it referred to a time after the accident, and upon this ground the evidence was excluded by the trial court. The fact as-to the existence of lumps and ridges upon this walk was made the sole condition of the plaintiff’s recovery. Having frozen the night before, whether there were lumps and ridges upon this crosswalk the morning after became material as evidence whether there were lumps and ridges upon the crosswalk at-nine o’clock the previous night. The evidence was important and competent,'and its rejection was error.

The main controversy in the case arose as to the admission of evidence of an insufficient drain in the gutter upon one of the streets. Broad street in the village of Schuylerville, or Main street as it is sometimes called, ran north and south. Into this -street from the west ran Grove street. Immediately from Main street the grade of Grove street began to ascend sharply for a considerable distance. Hpon the northerly side of Grove street was a gutter. In that gutter, upon the westerly side of the crosswalk in question, was a catch basin, from which an eight-inch pipe led away, as far as possible the waters coming down the gutter. The plaintiff was allowed to show that by reason of the construction of this drain pipe, in connection with the drain pipe from the gutter in Broad street, an insufficient drainage was provided in this gutter in Grove street, so that in times of heavy storms the waters would overflow from the gutter and run across this crosswalk, thereby, as it was claimed, creating ridges of ice, upon one of which the plaintiff is claimed to have [382]*382folien. This evidence was stfénuously objected to by the defendant’s ■ counsel upon two grounds : First, that it was not specified in t-lie notice of injury as the ground of the. defendant’s negligence. The second objection went to its materiality. This first objection was properly overruled by the learned trial court. The evidence was not allowed ás establishing a separate ground of negligence on the part of the municipality.' The evidence was simply'allowed as bearing upon the probability of there being ridges of ice upon the crosswalk, the existence of which for a length of time' was claimed to have been negligently allowed by the municipality. The distinction was properly made, provided the evidence fairly tends, to establish the existence of such ridges. With the conclusion of the learned trial justice'upon this question, however, I cannot agree. The question in issue was not whether the drain was insufficient, not as to its construction, but simply whether the Water was' accustomed to overflow at this point,, and thereby cause ridges of ice. ¡Not .one word of evidence was given that any ridge office was thus formed; ■ not' one word of evidence that any overfiqw.from this drain occurred in freezing weather. One witness swears that there was an overflow between one and two weeks, before the accident. He does not swear, however, to any facts which would justify the jury in finding that any'ridges- office were.-caused thereby. It is not claimed by any of the witnesses, either for plaintiff or' defendant, that this drain was. not sufficient in all'ordinary rains. The plaintiff’s expert only claims that it was insufficient in heavy storms.' These heavy storms or cloudbursts are not usually'the accompaniments of freezing weather,"but are inore.prevalent fin the summer, the spring "Or the fall, and -if in the winter, during a period When the thermometer is above freezing point.

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Bluebook (online)
139 A.D. 378, 124 N.Y.S. 92, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comstock-v-village-of-schuylerville-nyappdiv-1910.