Du Frane v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.

83 A.D. 298, 82 N.Y.S. 1
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 83 A.D. 298 (Du Frane v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co.) 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
Du Frane v. Metropolitan Street Railway Co., 83 A.D. 298, 82 N.Y.S. 1 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

This is a statutory action to recover for the death of George Du Frane, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant. The decedent, while crossing Amsterdam avenue from west [299]*299to east, either along the northerly crosswalk or diagonally toward the northeast from the northwest corner of One Hundred and Eighty-first street and Amsterdam avenue, on the 19th day of June, 1901, was struck by a north-bound car just as he reached the northbound street railway track, and thrown between the north and southbound tracks, and from the injuries received he died on the same day.

No exception was taken upon the trial which presents reversible ■error. The jury had considerable difficulty in arriving at a verdict, as is manifest from their coming into court for further instructions •and subsequently returning to court and announcing their inability to agree, whereupon the court, after advising them that it was important that they should agree upon a verdict and making some ■suggestions with a view to bringing about an agreement, sent them -out again and a sealed verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff.

The motion for a new trial was made upon the ground, among other things, that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence, and, upon a careful review of the evidence, we are of the opinion that it should have been granted.

Amsterdam avenue is one hundred feet in width. The carriageway, from curb to curb, is seventy feet, and fifteen feet upon either side is occupied by the sidewalk. The street is paved with rough stones, referred to as cobblestones, but, doubtless, blocks of sandstone. A crosswalk extends across the carriageway along the northerly line of One Hundred and Eighty-first street. The defendant ■owns and operates a double-track street railway along the avenue. There is a space twenty feet between the inner rails of the tracks and a like space between the outer rails and the curb upon either side ■The space between the rails of each track and that occupied by the rails is approximately five feet. The accident occurred at about ■midday, and it is undisputed that there was no other car, vehicle or •other obstruction to the view up or down the avenue either way for a distance of three blocks. The evidence all indicates that the decedent was struck by the front extreme westerly or outer corner •of the car just as he was stepping upon the track and before he had reached a point between the rails. It thus clearly appears that he must have been struck while taking the first or,- at most, the second step which brought him within the range of the body of the ear, or, in other words, from a point of safety to a place of danger.

[300]*300The plaintiff called three eye-witnesses to the accident and the defendant called five. The decedent was fifty-two years of age, was in the possession of all his faculties, except that there is a conflict in the evidence concerning whether his hearing was good, was a healthy, active man, having taken part in athletic contests (walking matches) and was at the time janitor of four houses and soliciting agent for the Police Gazette. He had been in the bar room of Porter’s Hotel, situated at the northwesterly corner of One Hundred and Eighty-first street and Amsterdam avenue, and there solicited and obtained an order for the Gazette for three months. He had an Angora lamb in a box, described as an egg box. On leaving the hotel he placed this box on his shoulder. The witnesses called by the plaintiff say he carried it on his left shoulder, which would not obstruct his view of a car approaching from the south, and the witnesses for the defendant say upon his right shoulder, which would obstruct such view. One of the witnesses for the plaintiff, who was standing on the northwesterly corner of One Hundred and Eighty-first street and Amsterdam avenue facing the avenue, says that the decedent paused for a minute at the curb, looked up and down the avenue and then passed directly along the crosswalk east with his head facing in the direction in which he was going until the time he was struck ; that at the time the decedent was at or just about the southbound track the car was only fifty, seventy-five or eighty feet away, coming up a slight grade at the rate of between fifteen and twenty miles an hour, and then says or about fifteen miles an hour, and he indicates a point upon a diagram about two-thirds the distance from One Hundred and Eighty-first to One Hundred and Eighty-second street where the car" stopped after the accident. He further testified on redirect examination that when the car was fifty feet from the decedent the latter was crossing the south-bound track and the motorman was looking in a southeasterly direction toward High Bridge with his back almost turned toward the decedent and so continued until after the accident, and he says that he heard no bell or gong. Another witness called by the plaintiff, who was standing on the porch of Porter’s Hotel facing the avenue, says that as the decedent left the curb and started across the track he looked up and down the avenue, and further on in his examination he says that this occurred when the decedent was crossing the south-bound [301]*301track and that after thus looking up and down the decedent went straight ahead, until he was struck; that the car was from fifty to seventy-five to eighty feet away when the decedent was on the east-bound track — by which he evidently meant the south-bound track — and that the car was coming at “ a good fast gait; ” that it went nearly to One Hundred and Eighty-second street before stopping ; that the motorman was not looking ahead but toward the east and that he heard no gong. The third witness called by the plaintiff was coming down the easterly side of the avenue from a point between One Hundred and Eighty-second and One Hundred and Eighty-third streets. He says that he saw the decedent upon the curb in front of Porter’s Hotel and that the car was then a little below One Hundred and Eightieth street coming fast, at the rate of about fifteen miles an hour; that when the decedent was crossing the south-bound track the car was about one hundred feet distant ; that the car went thirty or forty feet or a quarter of the length of the block after the accident before stopping, and that as the car came up the avenue the motorman was looking across toward Washington Bridge. The plaintiff called another witness, a passenger who was on a south-bound car three blocks to the north and did not see the accident, but saw the man “ pitched ” and turn a somersault between the tracks.

According to the evidence of most of defendant’s witnesses the decedent was passing diagonally to the northeast and reached the track upon which he was struck at a point about twenty feet or more north of the northerly crosswalk. The conductor and motorman of the car testified that it stopped at some point below One Hundred and Eighty-first street to let off some passengers. The motorman’s evidence indicates that this was between One Hundred and Eightieth and One Hundred and Eighty-first streets and nearer the latter, and the conductor leaves it in doubt whether it was in the block above or below One Hundred and Eightieth street. According to the testimony of the motorman he slowed up as he approached One Hundred and Eighty-first street, was looking ahead and to the right and left for pedestrians and vehicles on One Hundred and Eighty-first street and that the decedent “ kind of stopped and started up for to walk quicker than he was; ” that the gong was sounded and he shouted to the decedent and reversed the car, [302]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 A.D. 298, 82 N.Y.S. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/du-frane-v-metropolitan-street-railway-co-nyappdiv-1903.