Farrell v. Fire Insurance Salvage Corps

189 A.D. 795, 179 N.Y.S. 477, 1919 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4761
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 12, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 189 A.D. 795 (Farrell v. Fire Insurance Salvage Corps) 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
Farrell v. Fire Insurance Salvage Corps, 189 A.D. 795, 179 N.Y.S. 477, 1919 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4761 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Kelly, J.:

The evidence presents two conflicting stories of the accident, which were submitted to the jury by the learned trial justice in a charge which correctly states the law, and the verdict establishes the facts in the defendant’s favor. The plaintiff, a battalion chief in the fire department of the city of New York, in the performance of his duty was on his way to a fire. He was riding in the front seat of a fire department automobile, seated beside one of his subordinates, a fireman regularly detailed as a driver. The automobile was proceeding easterly along Decatur street, in Brooklyn, which is intersected by Lewis avenue running north and south. At or near the intersection of the two streets, the automobile in which plaintiff was seated, collided with a large automobile fire truck of the defendant proceeding to the same fire in answer to the same alarm which had summoned the plaintiff. The collision occurred about half-past seven o’clock in the morning. The fire alarm came from a box at the corner of Jefferson and Stuyvesant avenues. Both vehicles were endeavoring to reach the alarm box, the plaintiff proceeding east on Decatur street to Stuyvesant avenue, one block away, at which point he would turn to the north, five blocks to Jefferson avenue, and the defendant’s truck north on Lewis avenue to Jefferson avenue, at which point it would turn one block east to Stuyvesant [797]*797avenue. Both the plaintiff in his automobile and the defendant’s fire truck were undoubtedly traveling at high speed. That is what the vehicles were intended for; they were equipped with alarm bells, and defendant’s truck had a siren whistle. Plaintiff testified that the fire truck came north on Lewis avenue at the rate of twenty-five to thirty miles an hour; defendant’s captain estimated their speed at fifteen to twenty miles an hour. Defendant’s captain in charge of the fire truck says that the plaintiff’s automobile was going fast, but he did not attempt to state the rate of speed. Other occupants of the truck described the plaintiff as traveling at a high rate of speed. One of defendant’s witnesses observing both cars, testified that plaintiff’s car, the smaller of the two, seemed to go faster than defendant’s truck; “ it seemed to shoot through the air quicker.”

The learned trial judge told the jury that when an alarm of fire is sent out it is of the greatest importance that it be answered with celerity for the protection of life and limb and property and the preservation thereof, and that it was the right, if not the duty of the two vehicles, to answer such alarm With the greatest practicable speed; that the city ordinances limiting the speed of vehicles did not bind plaintiff or defendant. But the learned judge told the jury that plaintiff and defendant were bound to exercise reasonable care, reasonable control, to be on the alert, on the lookout and to be observant of the rights of others who had the right to be upon the streets. He said the obligation was the same as to each motor vehicle. Both vehicles had a right to go upon the street. It was their duty to answer the call, but they were bound to exercise the care and caution which reasonably prudent men would exercise under similar circumstances. This was the law of the case as laid down by the trial judge, and no exception was taken to the charge in this particular. Whether the plaintiff or the defendant’s representatives, in charge of the motor truck fulfilled this duty was entirely a question of fact. The trial judge told the jury that the plaintiff must prove that he was free from fault; that it was conceded that he was in the automobile with a driver sitting on the same seat with him and in control of the vehicle. The learned counsel for plaintiff excepted to the statement of the court that it was conceded [798]*798that plaintiff was in control of the vehicle, and the judge, stating that he thought the fact was conceded, then charged the jury that the plaintiff, sitting alongside the driver, was obliged to use that care and caution which the circumstances demanded of him, being in control of the driver and the vehicle; that he was obliged on his own account to use reasonable care and due regard for those who had a right to be upon the street and had equal rights with himself. Plaintiff’s counsel excepted to this portion of the charge and argues that the jury was in effect instructed that any negligence on the part of the fireman driving plaintiff’s automobile was imputable to plaintiff.- Counsel says that the rule of respondeat superior did not apply. But the plaintiff, battalion chief, was the superior of the fireman driving his car. The fireman chauffeur was subject to his orders. He testified, in answer to counsel for plaintiff, that plaintiff gave him instructions about the operation of the machine on this very trip, told him to take his time, that plaintiff was a man who would not ride fast, and if he (the chauffeur) “ went to go over 20 miles an hour he told me to slow down.” And the plaintiff himself testified: “ Q. Of course he [the chauffeur] was under your direction. A. Yes. Q. You could tell' him to go fast or slow, and he would have to obey you, no question about that? A. Yes. Q. This man was driving for you, and you were in charge of that vehicle, weren’t you? A. Yes, he was the regularly assigned chauffeur. Q. You were in charge of him and in charge of that vehicle? A. Yes. * * * Q. That is, he had to obey your orders and your instructions, no question about that? A. Yes.” The charge of the learned trial judge appears to be accurate in this respect.

When we examine the evidence of the plaintiff and his witnesses, and the evidence of those in charge of the defendant’s fire truck, we find that both parties admit their desire to reach the fire as soon as possible. There is evidence that the alarm bell was ringing on plaintiff’s automobile, and a similar bell on defendant’s truck, and that the siren whistle on the latter vehicle had been sounded several times. Neither the plaintiff nor his fireman chauffeur, or the captain of defendant’s truck and his men, heard any signal save their own. This is not surprising. When we come down to the time when the motor [799]*799vehicles approached the intersection of the two streets each party testifies to slackening speed. The streets cross at right angles. Plaintiff says that when twenty-five feet from Lewis avenue he could look to the south on that avenue a distance of seventy feet, and that defendant’s truck was not in sight. When he was eighteen feet west of the building line on Lewis avenue he could see all the way south to Fulton street two blocks away; that he was looking to the south continuously and had an uninterrupted view, but that he did not see the approaching truck until it was in front of him; that as quick as a flash of lightning the insurance patrol appeared in front of us.” The collision was head on — the plaintiff’s automobile going east striking the west or left-hand side of the truck going north. But plaintiff must be mistaken — at any rate, the jury was justified in not accepting his story — because, if he looked to the south when he was eighteen feet west of the building line on Lewis avenue or where his automobile cleared the building line, leaning over so as to get a good view which he said was his custom, he had an uninterrupted view to Fulton street two blocks away — five hundred and forty feet—and he says he saw nothing of the approaching fire truck. From a point eighteen feet west of the building to the point of collision was some fifty-three feet. So, according to his testimony, while his automobile traveled fifty-three feet the fire truck traveled five hundred and forty feet.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 A.D. 795, 179 N.Y.S. 477, 1919 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrell-v-fire-insurance-salvage-corps-nyappdiv-1919.