Fox v. . Village of Manchester

75 N.E. 1116, 183 N.Y. 141, 21 Bedell 141, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 607
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 75 N.E. 1116 (Fox v. . Village of Manchester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox v. . Village of Manchester, 75 N.E. 1116, 183 N.Y. 141, 21 Bedell 141, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 607 (N.Y. 1905).

Opinion

Cullen, Ch. J.

The action was brought to recover damages for the alleged negligence of the defendants by which was caused the death of the plaintiff’s intestate under the following circumstances: The principal street of Manchester, a village with about seven hundred inhabitants, runs north and south. The line of wires of the light and traction company entered the village at the intersection of the right of way of the Lehigh Valley railroad and was carried north along the street in front of a cemetery as far as a church, for which it furnished light. There had been also along the main street telephone wires which were strung on the poles of the traction company as far as the church and from that point north to the center of the village on another set of *145 poles. The telephone wire had not been in use for some time. On the occasion of the accident, which occurred about half-past eight in the evening, the deceased, crossing the street, seized hold of or came in contact with a piece of wire that hung down from a tree to the ditch between the sidewalk and carriageway, and received an electric shock by which he was immediately killed. The point at which the accident occurred was in front of the cemetery and between the church and the railroad crossing where the light and traction company maintained its line. An examination the next morning showed that the telephone wire lay across the light wires and that the insulation on the wires had worn away and that the hanging wire was a part of the telephone line. How long this piece of wire had been hanging down was a matter of controversy on the trial. That the current which caused the death of the deceased came from the light wire through the telephone wire was conceded. The plaintiff charged that the light company was negligent in permitting its wires to remain in a dangerous and unprotected condition and that the village was negligent in allowing that condition to remain by which the safety of travelers on the highway was imperilled. A verdict was recovered against both the defendants and the judgment entered thereon has been affirmed by the Appellate Division by a divided court.

The contributory negligence of the deceased was a question of fact for the jury. It was not negligence as a matter of law to cross the street at a point other than the crosswalk. Hor was deceased necessarily negligent in having seized hold of the wire. It may have come in contact with his person or he may have seized it to remove it from his way. The negli • gence of the village was also a question for the jury to be determined with reference to the length of time they might find the wire had been hanging down, whether the village authorities knew or should have known of its condition, and also to the place at which it was hanging, whether it was likely at that point to be dangerous. There were, however, errors committed on the trial which require a reversal of the judgment,

*146 To establish notice to the trustees of the dangerous condition of the electric wire the plaintiff, over the objection and exception of the village, was allowed to read in evidence the testimony of the trustees taken at the inquest held by the coroner on the body of the deceased. That the declaration of an agent or that of an officer of a corporation is not evi-' dence against his principal, except when made in the course of his agency or in the discharge of his official duties, is settled law. (First Nat. Bank v. Ocean Nat. Bank, 60 N. Y. 278.) It is contended, however, that a different rule applies to declarations the only object of which is to show knowledge of or notice to the person making them, and in support of that claim two decisions of the Appellate Division are cited. (Shaw v. Town of Potsdam, 11 App. Div. 508; Vandewater v. Town of Wappinger, 69 App. Div. 325.) It may be that declarations of a village official as to 'the condition of á highway, made not only before the occur- ' rence on which it is sought to charge the village with liability, but sufficiently long before to have made it the duty of the village, with the knowledge which the declaration imports, to repair the highway, are competent evidence. In such a case á declaration would not be competent as an admission, but as evidence of the state of the knowledge of the person making the declaration. Such was the case in Shaw v. Town of Potsdam (supra). The knowledge of the officer or agent after the transaction is of no materiality whatever and his declaration then made of his previous knowledge is as purely hearsay as a declaration of any previous act. The doctrine of Vandewater v. Town of Wappinger (supra) is manifestly erroneous and cannot be upheld. The respondent contends that this error was rendered harmless by the subsequent testimony of the trustees. It is asserted that the trustees on the trial of this action testified substantially to everything that they had testified to before the coroner. This claim is not wholly justified. Smith, one of the trustees, testified positively that he did not see the wire which killed the deceased hanging down from the tree and that he had made *147 no statement before the coroner to that effect. It is true that the testimony given before the coroner would have been competent for the purpose of contradicting Smith’s testimony on the trial, but this would not authorize its use as affirmative evidence to show that the trustees of the village had notice of the dangerous condition of the pendent wire.

For the purpose of charging the defendants with the knowledge of the dangerous condition of the wires the plaintiff was allowed to prove, over the objection and exception of the appellants, that eight or ten months previous to the accident to the deceased a piece of telephone wire in front of a bakery, at a point nearly a quarter of a mile from the scene of the accident and far to the north of the church where the light wires terminated, lmng down from a pole nearly to the ground and that several children and one grown man• had received shocks therefrom. It appeared that promptly on this occurrence the trustees caused the wire to be cut off at the top of the pole and that thereafter there was no trouble. We think this occurrence was too remote in time and in distance to be competent evidence and that its admission was erroneous. It is contended that the fact that persons had received shocks from the telephone wire at this point should have apprised the trustees that the telephone wire and the light wires must at some point to the south have been in contact and, therefore, dangerous, and that the trustees should thereupon have inspected the two lines and either had the telephone line removed or the position of the wires changed. This view was substantially accepted by the trial court, which charged, over the exception of the defendant village, that the law imposed on the officials of the municipality the duty of making an inspection from time to time to see whether the wires, if dangerous, had been remedied or removed. We are of a different opinion. hTobody had received substantial injury by the hanging wire at the bakery. The children had played with it and thus received the shocks. It is true one man is .said to have been knocked down, but it appears that he was intoxicated at the time.

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.E. 1116, 183 N.Y. 141, 21 Bedell 141, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-village-of-manchester-ny-1905.