Connelly v. Manhattan Railway Co.

23 N.Y.S. 88, 68 Hun 456, 75 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 456, 52 N.Y. St. Rep. 462
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 23 N.Y.S. 88 (Connelly v. Manhattan Railway Co.) 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
Connelly v. Manhattan Railway Co., 23 N.Y.S. 88, 68 Hun 456, 75 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 456, 52 N.Y. St. Rep. 462 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinions

O’BRIEN, J.

This action was brought for the personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff while a passenger on the defendant’s railway during what is known as the “blizzard” of March 12, 1888. The injuries resulted from a collision of two trains upon the de[89]*89fendant’s elevated railroad at Seventy-Sixth street and Third avenue. “By an amendment made at the first trial the defendant admitted that the plaintiff was such passenger, and also admitted the collision, and further admitted that that admission, in and of itself, entitled the plaintiff to recover damages; and the defendant still further then and there amended its answer by setting up the affirmative defense that the accident happened notwithstanding the exercise of the highest degree of care on the part of the defendant; that it was an unavoidable accident within the meaning of the law, and was attributable to what is known in the law as an 'act of God/ and could not be prevented by the exercise of that degree of care which the law required of the defendant, and under the circumstances existing at the time the accident happened. Under the pleadings as amended, together with the admission, it was only necessary for the plaintiff to prove as his case in chief the nature and extent of his injuries. The burden of proving the affirmative defense was on the defendant.” The -first trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $10,000, which judgment was reversed by this court (one judge dissenting) upon the ground of error in the admission of a single question and answer, the jndge writing the prevailing opinion saying: “There is evidence enough in this case to sustain the judgment, and I should be in favor of affirmance were it not for an error which, it seems to me, was committed * * * in the admission of testimony.” 60 Hun, 495, 15 N. Y. Supp. 176. It is unnecessary to give all the facts appearing upon the second trial, the principal ones relied upon to sustain the burden assumed by the defendant of showing that this was an unavoidable accident, and those militating against this view presented by plaintiff, all sufficiently appearing in the opinions upon the former appeal. Again the plaintiff has been successful, and this time has succeeded in obtaining a verdict for $20,000, double the amount awarded by the jury upon the first trial. Upon the merits, we concur with the view expressed in the opinions written in this case upon the former appeal, that sufficient appears from the testimony to have justified the denial of the motion to dismiss the complaint, because upon the testimony it was clearly a question for the jury; and, as we shall see, the escape of the defendant from what, by the two verdicts rendered against it, would seemingly be the just consequences of its negligence, is attempted to be secured by again finding some error in the record sufficient to justify a reversal of the judgment.

It is insisted that it was error to submit to the jury the question of whether the defendant should have operated its road at all on that day. This naked proposition was nowhere charged, and if we take the exact language of the learned trial judge, in connection with the context, as it appears in the charge, we do not think that any exception to it will lie. He says:

“If they [meaning defendants] have established to you that by the action of the elements, under the circumstances of the case, they not being guilty of any want of care, the accident happened, then I charge you they are entitled to a verdict. But you must take into consideration the day itself. It is for [90]*90you to say whether, under all' the circumstances, it was an exercise of proper care for them to have started that train at- that particular time, and under those particular circumstances, or to have tried to bring it on under circumstances which were found to exist when the train which collided with the plaintiff's train approached the vicinity of Seventy-Ninth or Seventy-Sixth-street. I do not intimate' any opinion upon the facts. If you find that under all the circumstances of the case the defendant had furnished proper op--" pliances, proper engines and cars, and proper and competent employes; that this accident was caused without any negligence on the part of the defendant, but was due entirely to the storm and the elements, unaided by any negligence on the part of man, because that is the meaning of the act of God, —if man’s agency intervenes no accident can be attributed to the act of God alone,—then, it is your duty to render-a verdict in favor of the defendant But if you believe, under all the circumstances of the case, and all the evidence before you, that the defendants or their servants were guilty of negligence in starting, that train, or in the conduct of it, I charge you the plaintiff is entitled to recover, because then the defendant has not sustained the propositions which it has advanced in the amended answer.”

Considering the questions which were to be submitted to the jury, involving not only the conditions under which the train was started from Harlem, but also those under which it was started from Eighty-Fourth street, with instructions “to skip the Seventy-Sixth street station,” it will be seen that the court was right in its charge, when it is read in the light of the facts appearing upon the trial.

Another error assigned is said to be the submission to the jury, of the question whether the failure to set the hand brakes caused the accident, it being claimed by defendant that the uncontradicted evidence shows that that could "not have possibly been the cause. The evidence upon this subject may be as conclusive in defendant’s favor as claimed, still me form of the request will show that the court was justified in not charging it. The request was in these words:

“That If the power brakes were applied properly, the train brakes won' not add to the retarding force, and any omission to put on the train brake in that case would not constitute negligence.”

Undoubtedly, if the power brakes were properly applied, nothing would be gained by the application of the hand brakes. But there was testimony in the case showing that the wheels themselves might, by reason of the snow and ice clinging thereto, have been rendered irresponsive to such power brakes; and it was no. doubt for this or some similar reason that .the engineer, out of abundant caution, whistled, just prior to the accident, for the hand brakes. We think that the trial judge was justified in refusing to charge the proposition in the form in which it was presented, and say that it was a question of fact for the jury.

Error is also assigned for the refusal of the court to charge at defendant’s request that—

“If the brakes and appliances for stopping the train were properly applied at the distance from the first train always before found sufficient to stop a train under the most adverse conditions known in the operation of that line of rail way, the defendant is not liable.”

The judge was justified in refusing to charge this proposition,' because it was tantamount to saying that the whole theory of plain[91]*91tiff’s case was predicated upon negligence of the defendant in the handling of the brakes and appliances for stopping the train; but, as said by Mr. Justice Barrett upon the former appeal:

“Tlie defendant seems to think that its responsibility rested solely upon the manner in which the colliding train was run.

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Related

Connelly v. Manhattan Railway Co.
15 N.Y.S. 176 (New York Supreme Court, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 N.Y.S. 88, 68 Hun 456, 75 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 456, 52 N.Y. St. Rep. 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connelly-v-manhattan-railway-co-nysupct-1893.