Crawford v. City of New York

68 A.D. 107, 74 N.Y.S. 261
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 68 A.D. 107 (Crawford v. City of New York) 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
Crawford v. City of New York, 68 A.D. 107, 74 N.Y.S. 261 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinions

Ingraham, J.:

The plaintiff slipped and fell upon the sidewalk on the north side ■of One Hundred and Fourth street, west of Columbus avenue, and was injured, and this action is to recover from the defendant the damages thereby sustained. The complaint alleges that on or about the 1st day of December, 1898, and for upwards of a week prior thereto, as well as thereafter, the defendant carelessly and negligently permitted and allowed the sidewalk or pavement in front of the vacant lots between Nos. 109 and 119, on the north side of said One Hundred and Fourth street, and at and about 160 feet west of the northwesterly intersection of said One Hundred and Fourth street and Columbus avenue, to become, be and remain in an unlawful, slippery, unsafe and dangerous condition, covered with ice and snow, whereof the defendant had notice, actual and constructive.

Hpon the trial the plaintiff testified that it began to snow on Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, and continued during the following day, upon which day several inches of snow fell; that on the following Thursday, December first, she started to walk to Columbus avenue on One Hundred and Fourth street; that when she got on the sidewalk in front of these vacant lots she fell and broke her wrist; that the whole sidewalk in front of these vacant lots was covered with snow and ice, extending all the way from the •curb to the fence in front of these lots, and that the street in front of these lots was at that time impassable from the snow. She further testified that the vacant lots were surrounded by a high fence; tiat in the center of thé sidewalk there Was a single row of flagstones, the outer and inner edge of the sidewalk being dirt; that she walked •close to the fence when she fell; that the flagstones were all covered ' with snow; that it snowed on the day before she fell, and the snow was there packed down; that it was not snowing on December first; that the snow that fell on Friday and Saturday had not been cleaned from this sidewalk at the time of the accident, and it remained augmented by the snow that fell on the subsequent days; that the surface of the sidewalk was icy and rough; that there was much traffic upon this street, and a great many people passed; that the witness had passed over the sidewalk between the previous Saturday and the day of the accident, and that there was the same condition of ice during all that period from the preceding Saturday until the [110]*110time she fell; that on Monday it got very cold, and as soon as it got cold it became icy and bad to walk on. Another witness testified that from the time the snow fell on Saturday, prior to the accident, it lay continuously on the sidewalk; that “ it freezed over when it snowed, and it was rough on top and the sidewalk was broken there. * * * It is ah uneven sidewalk and inclined towards 121; it comes down on a point.”

On behalf of the defendant it was proved that on the 25th of February, 1896, there were in the city of Hew York, including the boroughs of Manhattan and the Bronx, 1,158 linear miles of sidewalk and 27,256,043 square yards of sidewalk; that in that year the first snow fell on the 24th of Hovember, 1898, when three inches; fell; that the next fall was on Saturday the twenty-sixth, when five inches fell; that on the following day (Sunday), the twenty-seventh? five inches fell, and on the twenty-ninth and thirtieth six inches fell; that there was no snow on the first of December; the snow storm of the thirtieth ceased at nine a. m. on that day; that on the twenty-fourth of Hovember the temperature ranged between forty-one and thirty-two degrees, on the twenty-fifth from thirty-four to twenty-six degrees, on the twenty-sixth from thirty-four to twenty-five degrees, on the twenty-seventh from twenty-eight to twenty-five degrees, on the twenty-eighth • from thirty-seven to twenty-seven degrees, On the twentyminth from forty-one to thirty degrees, on the thirtieth from thirty-nine to twenty-eight degrees and on the first of December from thirty^seven to thirty-one degrees; that snow and ice will melt at forty degrees and freeze at thirty-two-degrees.

Upon this evidence the case was submitted to the jury, who found a verdict for the defendant, and from that verdict the plaintiff appeals. The plaintiff complains of several errors of the charge of the court, and of its refusal to charge, as- requested by the plaintiff.

The first question presented, however, is whether upon this evidence a verdict for the plaintiff. could have been sustained. If a. finding that the defendant was negligent could not be sustained, then it would not be necessary to examine the questions presented by the exceptions to the charge. The general rule applicable to-claims against municipal corporations for negligence occasioned by [111]*111the slipping on ice and snow has, of late years, been much discussed and the general principle upon which a recovery can be sustained is now quite clearly settled. While it is recognized that there is imposed upon municipal corporations the duty to keep the streets and avenues of a city in a reasonably sáfe condition for the use of pedestrians and vehicles, and that for the negligent performance of such a duty the municipal corporation is liable, yet it is also well settled that that duty does not impose upon such corporation the performance of impossibilities; that it would be clearly impossible during a winter in this climate to keep the sidewalks of the city clear of snow and ice or to immediately remove the snow from all the sidewalks of the city. The snow when falling is packed down by pedestrians using the' sidewalks; and when in freezing weather the packed snow is turned to ice, its removal is attended by considerable difficulty, and where the owners of abutting property fail to keep the sidewalks in front of their property clear, and where the only means for clearing away the snow and ice is for the city to do the work, it is not negligence if the city does not immediately proceed to clean the sidewalks. Of course a case can be easily conceived where the snow and ice are left for such a length of time and in such a condition 'as to render the use of the sidewalks dangerous and to make it the duty of the municipality to act; but the city is not obliged to assume that the owners of the abutting property will fail to act, and the moment a snow storm ends, clean off the sidewalks that have not been cleaned. Considering the number of miles of sidewalk in the city, this would be clearly impossible. It will be sufficient to call attention to a few late cases in which this question has been discussed.

In O’Keeffe v. Mayor (29 App. Div. 524) we held that under the cases of Taylor v. City of Yonkers (105 N. Y. 206); Harrington v. City of Buffalo (121 id. 149), and Ayres v. Village of Hammondsport (130 id. 665), a municipal corporation is not liable because ice and snow form upon a sidewalk and a person sustains injury therefrom. Something more than that is necessary. What the plaintiff must prove is that the municipal corporation neglected a duty that it owed to him in seeing that this sidewalk was clear and free from ice and snow on the day in question. In Staley v. Mayor (37 App. Div. 598) the plaintiff was injured on, the [112]*11230th day of December, 1894. On the evening of the twenty-sixth a fall of snow began which continued until late that night, when it turned into rain and ended about noon on the twenty-seventh, when it commenced to snow again and continued until half-past one that day.

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Bluebook (online)
68 A.D. 107, 74 N.Y.S. 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-city-of-new-york-nyappdiv-1902.