Globe Malleable Iron & Steel Co. v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad

175 A.D. 97, 160 N.Y.S. 24, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7579

This text of 175 A.D. 97 (Globe Malleable Iron & Steel Co. v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad) 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
Globe Malleable Iron & Steel Co. v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad, 175 A.D. 97, 160 N.Y.S. 24, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7579 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

De Angelis, J.:

The plaintiff Globe Malleable Iron and Steel Company, owning and operating a plant for the manufacture of malleable iron in the city of Syracuse (the owner of the building and its contents burned), and its associated plaintiffs, the insurance companies which paid losses, have recovered a judgment against the defendant upon the verdict of a jury for the value of two-thirds of such property consumed in a fire which occurred in the early morning of January 23, 1912, owing to the alleged negligence of the servants of the defendant operating a freight train in obstructing the passage of some of the fire apparatus of the city on its way over certain streets to extinguish the fire which consumed the property, upon the theory that two-thirds of the property would have been saved if there had been no such obstruction.

While the jury adopted the theory of the plaintiffs, to wit, that two-thirds of the property destroyed might have been saved but for the alleged negligence of the defendant’s servants, and such theory involves a considerable degree of uncertainty, closely approaching speculation, and although some of the rulings upon the evidence introduced in support of the theory might not be upheld, the fundamental question to be determined is whether or not there was sufficient evidence of defendant’s negligence to justify the recovery. To answer this question we must take a brief survey of the case.

The defendant’s tracks, known as the West Shore tracks, run easterly and westerly through the northerly part of the city [99]*99and in locus in quo are five in number, parallel to each other. The middle track is the east-bound freight track. The train claimed to have obstructed the passage of the fire apparatus was an east-bound freight train, consisting of a locomotive and tender and fifty-three freight cars. It was a fast freight train. The train did not stop. The plaintiffs’ claim was that it should have stopped and made a passageway for the fire apparatus by what is called cutting the train. The claim was further made by them that the train moved too slowly, assuming that it might have kept on moving, properly, and that requests were made by some of the firemen, addressed to some of the men on the train, to stop the train and cut it.

Certain streets, which run northerly and southerly and among them Beech street, Teall avenue, next easterly, and Greenway avenue, which latter street is the easterly boundary of the city, cross these tracks at grade. Between Beech street and Teall avenue are Vine street and Winton street, which are streets running northerly and southerly, but end north of the tracks. Burnet avenue runs easterly and westerly north of the railroad, and is the nearest street to the railroad on the north. It is a paved street, and is crossed by Beech street, Teall avenue and Greenway avenue, as well as by Vine street and Winton street.

South of the railroad, on Beech street, and about parallel to the tracks, were Canal street, the Erie canal (crossed by a high bridge), East Water street, the New York Central tracks (subgrade), and East Genesee street. Beech street, Teall avenue, and Greenway avenue, south of Burnet avenue, are dirt roads. Greenway avenue, south of Burnet avenue, is a cul-de-sac, the southerly end of which is a few feet southerly of the southerly end of the building burned, and Teall avenue south of Burnet avenue would be a cul-de-sac of about the same length, but for a dirt road (referred to as a dump road) leading from its southerly end westerly to Beech street. This dirt road is parallel with the railroad and may be regarded as a continuation of Canal street.

The building in question was situated west of Greenway avenue, and south of and within a feet feet of the railroad, and was about five hundred and forty feet in length northerly and [100]*100southerly, and from one hundred and twenty to one hundred and thirty feet wide. It was huilt of concrete and steel. It had a large number of windows, starting* about four feet from the ground, and being fourteen feet high and twenty feet wide, each. The roof was supported by steel trusses eighty feet apart and was covered with gravel laid in tar. On this 23d day of January, 1912, at some time in the early morning, a fire broke out in the northeasterly part of the building, which, proceeding rapidly, consumed by far the greater part of the building’ and its contents.

The fire alarm was received at No. 7’s engine house and No. 9’s engine house at four-fifty or four-fifty-one. No. 7’s engine house is on East Eayette street, between Grouse avenue and University avenue, and so south of the West Shore railroad, and No. 9’s engine house is on Oak street, north of Highland avenue, and so north of the West Shore railroad.

No. 7’s hose cart responded to the call, manned by the driver and five others. The driver intended to go east on East Fayette street to Beech street, north on Beech street over the canal bridge and over the West Shore railroad to Burnet avenue, the paved street, thence easterly on Burnet avenue to Greenway avenue, and thence southerly on Greenway avenue across the railroad again to the burning building. When he reached the West Shore railroad on Beech street he found the crossing occupied by this moving east-bound freight train. He waited a minute and then went back to Canal street, and thence easterly on the dirt road to Teall avenue, thence northerly on Teall avenue, with the idea that he would cross the railroad and reach Burnet avenue that way, and go thence to the scene of the fire; hut when he got to the railroad crossing on Teall avenue he found the same train, still moving easterly, occupying that crossing. The men on the hose cart then left the cart and carried part of their hose across the block easterly, a distance of about 700 feet, to Green way avenue, where they adjusted their hose to a hydrant in the avenue and put a stream of water on the fire. There is. no claim that any one on the train was asked to cut or stop the train till it reached Greenway avenue.

No. 9’s hose cart responded to the call, coming from No. 9’s engine house down to Burnet avenue, thence easterly to Green-[101]*101way avenue and thence southerly along Greenway avenue to the railroad, when its course was obstructed by this same train of cars passing over the crossing. It had just attached its hose to a hydrant on the north side of the railroad when No. 9’s engine arrived. Thereupon the hose was attached to the engine, which was ready to cross the track as soon as an opportunity was afforded.

In this connection we are taking the view of the evidence most favorable to the plaintiffs, although some of the plaintiffs’ evidence is not very convincing. There was evidence from which the jury might have found that the captain of engine company No. 9 sitting with the driver on the hose cart, when No. 9’s hose cart arrived, and within twenty feet of the locomotive as it passed over the Greenway avenue crossing, called out to some men standing on the passageway that leads down to the step to get out from the cab of the locomotive, “Whydon’t you stop and let us go by ? ” and saw the lips of the man addressed move, but heard nothing that he said.

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Bluebook (online)
175 A.D. 97, 160 N.Y.S. 24, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/globe-malleable-iron-steel-co-v-new-york-central-hudson-river-nyappdiv-1916.