Deyoe v. State

207 A.D. 97, 201 N.Y.S. 651, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5907

This text of 207 A.D. 97 (Deyoe v. State) 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
Deyoe v. State, 207 A.D. 97, 201 N.Y.S. 651, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5907 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

McCann, J.:

The appellant herein is the executrix of the last will and testa- • ment of Augustus Deyoe, who met his death on the 3d day of March, 1917, while driving along the public highway to his home from the village of Schuylerville. He had a horse and light cutter. He was last seen about eleven o’clock in the evening of March second, when he took his horse from a stable where it had been prior to leaving for his home. The highway along which he was traveling intersected Fish creek at or near the hamlet of Grangerville. His body was found in the early morning, lying across a dam near a bridge crossing said creek. He was dead and the horse and cutter which he had driven were in the creek near by.

The highway over which the decedent traveled was a so-called county highway, No. 244. The highway runs east and west and [98]*98Fish creek flows to the north under said bridge, which is of iron or steel construction and was erected in 1882. It consists of two spans resting on abutments, one on either end of the bridge and one in the center of the stream. At the easterly end of said bridge there was a wooden sign prohibiting the passage of loads over said bridge exceeding a certain weight. This sign was on the northerly side of the highway and just to the east of the east end of the bridge. On the morning when decedent’s body was found, there were fresh marks on the sign in question and the decedent’s cutter was bent up in front and had white paint marks thereon, being the same color of paint as upon the sign. On the northerly side of the highway and immediately east of the bridge the land sloped abruptly to the edge of the creek at an angle of approximately forty-five degrees. On the day in question this slope was covered with ice or frozen snow which extended from the roadway to the creek. The surface of such snow or ice showed that it had been scraped off. There was no barrier along the roadway at the place in question and the absence of such barrier is claimed as a ground of negligence in this case. This claim has been tried twice. On the first trial in the Court of Claims the claim was dismissed at the close of the claimant’s case (112 Misc. Rep. 423); the judgment was reversed and a new trial directed by this court with an opinion which is reported in 197 Appellate Division, 716. Upon the second trial the claim was dismissed on the merits. The basis of the claim against the State for liability is the fact that the highway in question is a county highway, the expense of the construction of which was shared by the State and county and the maintenance of which was under the patrol system, so called, charging'the maintenance thereof against the State. The only question at issue upon this charge of liability is the question of whether or not that part of the driveway where the accident occurred was an approach ” to the bridge in question. .If it is a part of the bridge, being an approach to the same, the liability for failure to maintain a barrier, if any were necessary, is on the town of Saratoga in which said bridge is located. If, on the other hand, the location is a part of the highway and does not constitute an approach to the bridge, the liability is upon the State. (See Highway Law, § 176, as amd. by Laws of 1916, chap. 578. Since amd. by Laws of 1922, chap. 371.) The court below has found as a fact that the decedent slipped, slid or fell over and down the slope along the northerly side of said embankment or fill constituting the easterly approach of the bridge into the waters of Fish creek, as a result of which he was drowned; that he was free from contributory negligence; that the place in question was one which in the exercise of reasonable care and prudence should [99]*99have been guarded by a barrier and that the absence of such barrier at such point was the proximate cause of the death of the decedent. The court below dismissed the claim upon the sole ground that the place of the accident was an approach to the bridge and, therefore, a part of said bridge and not a part of the highway and that consequently no duty rested upon the State to maintain the bridge or erect guardrails or barriers thereon. On the first trial an opinion was written which is reported in 112 Miscellaneous Reports, 423. No opinion was written on the second trial. On the second trial, however, in a discussion between the attorneys and the court, the latter stated very clearly the theory upon which his decision is based, as follows: “ My conception of the situation is that so much of this roadway as lay within the original bank of the creek which had to be filled and retained there in order to furnish access to the bridge structure proper is the approach — speaking of the approach as distinguished from the rest of the roadway. I wouldn’t have a particle of difficulty with this case if I could have that made plain to me.”

The language of the court as above expressed carries with it the suggestion that there has been a fill or artificial construction between the present east line of the bridge and some point easterly thereof where there was an original bank of the creek, or in other words that the bank of the creek has receded from, where it originally was located. There is no evidence in this case to show that there ever was any artificial fill or that there was any need thereof in order to create the so-called embankment which now constitutes the highway. There is no evidence of any artificial construction. So far as it appears from the record, the highway follows the grade of the land as it is and has been for all time. There is evidence to show that there has been certain filling or grading at times to fill up holes caused by the washing of the creek across the highway and there is evidence to show that in past years logs were drawn out from the creek across the highway in question, causing depressions to be made where they were snaked ” from the creek on to the bank and across the road. It seems, however, that the court could not have been thoroughly satisfied that there was artificial construction created in the building of this road. It appears in the discussion between the court and counsel, in reply to a question addressed by counsel to the court, as to what evidences he found of artificial situation, the court replied: Coupled by, or coupled with my own general observation of streams and bridges and abutments. * * * There isn’t anything to indicate anything else, to my mind. Now the extent of it, how far back it goes, I am not able at the moment to say. But I think that is [100]*100all there is of this case,— is right there; to tell how far back it goes.”

It is true that the general appearance of the photographs introduced in evidence would indicate that there had been a grading in or embankment in order to create this road, but the record is void of any evidence to that effect. Witness W. J. Thorne, who resides within 250 feet of the bridge, testified that he knew the location for fifty-eight years; that there was no change in the bridge except one pier was placed in the stream instead of three and during all his acquaintance with the location there never had been any change in the location of the abutments or fill east of the bridge; that water had run over the road and the timbers had been pulled from the stream as above suggested. Witness Winney also testified that in thirty-five years’ acquaintance with the location he never had known of any artificial filling. Much stress has been placed upon the fact that the east bank of the creek is now located farther to the east than formerly.

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Related

Deyoe v. State
197 A.D. 716 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1921)
Deyoe v. State
112 Misc. 423 (New York State Court of Claims, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
207 A.D. 97, 201 N.Y.S. 651, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deyoe-v-state-nyappdiv-1923.