Ford v. LakeShore and Michigan Southern Railway Co.

17 N.Y. St. Rep. 393
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJuly 13, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 17 N.Y. St. Rep. 393 (Ford v. LakeShore and Michigan Southern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford v. LakeShore and Michigan Southern Railway Co., 17 N.Y. St. Rep. 393 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Beckwith, Ch. J

—In the argument presented by the learned counsel for the defendant, he assumes a proposition which, as it seems to me, is not established by the evidence; he assumes that the manner of loading and carrying lumber, practiced on the occasion when the plaintiff’s intestate lost his life, was a mode which had been adopted and tried in a great many instances, and uniformly pursued in the business of the defendant for a long time, “perhaps for years,” and that in all that period, and in all such experience, no similar accident had happened; that, on the occasion in .question, the defendant loaded and carried the timbers, as it had always uniformly done, without a mishap; and, consequently, that the defendant failed to establish any facts upon which, as ground for inference of negligence, the case could be submitted to the jury, the idea being that, where universal experience has established the safety of a thing or process, the plaintiff must prove the existence of some special defect that has crept into the thing, or some special omission of customary usage with respect to the process; and he cites in support of his position, amongst other cases, the following decisions of the court of appeals: Dougan v. Champlain Transportation Company, 56 N, Y., 1; Loftus v. Union Ferry Company, 84 id., 455; Burke v. Witherbee, 98 id., 562; Marsh v. Chickering, 101 id., 396; Laflin v. Buffalo and South Western R. R. Co., 106 id.. 136; 8 N. Y. State Rep., 596.

In Dougan v. Champlain Transportation Company, the form of gangway in question had been in use upon all of the steamboats on Lake Champlain for years, and there was no proof tending to show that any one had ever before fallen, and gone under the railing overboard. In Loftus v. Union Ferry Co., forty millions of people annually passed over the •defendant’s ferries, and, until the occurrence in question, no accident had happened from any person falling or getting through the space in the guard. In Burke v. Witherbee, the judge, writing the opinion, says: “In the mine alone, cars drawn by a hook must have made several hundred thousand passages without a single accident. What more could any reasonable or prudent man have to justify him in believing that this convenient appliance was also a safe and proper one.”

In Marsh v. Chickering, the ladder which slipped, caus[396]*396ing the plaintiff’s hurt, had been in use by him safely for six weeks. In the case of Hubbell v. City of Yonkers, it appeared that the street had been in the same condition since its opening over ten years before, and that no similar accident had occurred.

In Lajlin v. Buffalo and Southwestern R. R. Co., the platform had been used for many years by passengers, and prior to the accident, no one had been injured, or had suffered any inconvenience on account of the distance from the cars to the platform

The cases cited all recognize a truth, which is but a law, relating to the operations of the human mind, that what has been noticed in infinite instances to be a fact or incident, attendant upon certain circumstances, will be reposed upon as a fact or incident inseparable from the same circumstances. The scientist, who investigates the operations of nature, and discovers the constant recurrence of a fact with certain circumstances, relies upon the truth of its permanency of place and connection in the order of the physical world, and makes it a premiss in his reasoning. The inference is irresistible, that what has pToved through a long experience to be true or sufficient, will continue to be so, and practical men in all the affairs of life rely upon such a deduction. In the cases cited, the fact that long experience had demonstrated the continuous and unexceptive sufficiency and safety of the appliances, the fact that through a vast number of trials, and up to the time of the accident in question, the appliances had proved to be sufficient, were admitted or conclusively proved, and afforded a ground for the court to say, as a matter of law, no evidence being given of a chance defect or of a fault occurring, which skill or prudence would have discovered, that the attention exercised by the defendant, was within the limits of ordinary or reasonable care. In the case at bar, the proof in this respect was deficient, and the court would not have been justified in non-suiting the plaintiff, on the grounds that the mode of handling the lumber adopted on the occasion when Ford lost his life, had been demonstrated by experience to be a safe one, and the plaintiff had failed to point out any special defect that had occurred in the appliances, or special omission of ordinary duty. It does not avail, for a witness to say, that he had known of no like accident, or to affirm in general language, that the manner of doing a thing was according to the mode adopted by the defendant. The facts should be proved upon which a defendant claims that the mode adopted and upon which he relied, had been established by experience to be safe, so that the court or jury may judge of his right to rely on such experience. The evidence here fails to show such an [397]*397extent of practice of the method the defendant adopted in carrying the lumber, as is necessary to enable the court to say, as a matter of law, that the defendant’s conduct was proper. The trial judge was, therefore, right in refusing to non-suit the plaintiff, on the ground so far considered.

The question remains, whether there was otherwise evidence for the jury.

The proofs tended to show, that the defendant had never promulgated any rules, or given any direction as to the manner of loading lumber, nor as to the kind of cars to be used for. its transportation over its road. The importance and extent of the business of transporting lumber, would seem to require the adoption of some system on the part of railroad companies, having regard to the safety of their servants, and others. But in this case, the evidence was such as to allow a finding by the jury, that the defendant left all that part of its duty to the foremen, who superintended the loading of the lumber. These foremen, therefore, stood in the place of the defendant, and their acts were the acts of the defendant. Crispin v. Babbitt, 81 N. Y., 516; Anthony v. Leeret, 105 N. Y., 600; Abel v. President, etc., D. and H. C. Co., 103 N. Y., 581; 4 N, Y. State Rep., 269.

There is some evidence tending to show, that the defendant’s foremen had adopted, as a proper mode of loading and carrying lumber and timber, the mode followed on the occasion when the plaintiff’s intestate was killed, that is to say, the piling it on coal cars and heaping it roof-shaped above the lateral supports or box sides of the cars, relying on the width of base and gravity of the pieces of timber to keep them in place. There is evidence, that they, in their minds, had fixed upon this method as suitable, although there was not evidence of such a uniform and continued test of its sufficiency by use, as would force upon a man’s mind a conclusion that it was a safe method.

The defendant claims this mode was skilful and prudent. Whether it was or not, involves a consideration of the complex subject of the car, its shape, box, want of stakes and the heaping of the timber above the box.

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Related

Crispin v. . Babbitt
81 N.Y. 516 (New York Court of Appeals, 1880)
Anthony v. . Leeret
12 N.E. 561 (New York Court of Appeals, 1887)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 N.Y. St. Rep. 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-lakeshore-and-michigan-southern-railway-co-nysuperctnyc-1888.