Hanrahan v. Brooklyn Elevated Railroad

17 A.D. 588, 45 N.Y.S. 474
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 17 A.D. 588 (Hanrahan v. Brooklyn Elevated 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
Hanrahan v. Brooklyn Elevated Railroad, 17 A.D. 588, 45 N.Y.S. 474 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Goodrich, P. J.:

On March 2, 1896, the plaintiff’s intestate, Jeremiah Hanrahan, was killed at the Van Sicklen avenue station of defendant’s elevated railroad. He had been car inspector for eight years. It was the custom of the company to make up its trains at Van Sicklen avenue, where, at the time of the accident, a train consisting of an engine and three cars had just come in. The engine had been uncoupled from the cars, leaving a space of two or three feet between the engine and the rest of the train. Hanrahan entered this open space to. inspect something on the front of the first car, and it does not appear that he took any precautions against danger. While standing there two other cars, from what is known as the D. 0. yard, on Broadway, several blocks distant, were shunted out of that yard by an engine to be kicked ” down, that is, to be run out to the rest of the train, their movement being assisted by a down grade. A brakeman was standing on the platform of the forward end of 212, which was the first of the two cars, and, as he approached the standing train, he attempted to check the movement of the two cars with the brake j but, for some unexplained reason, either because the chain on the brake failed to wind around the staff of the brake properly, or because ice and snow had gathered between the wheels and the shoes of the brake, he was unable to wind up the brake sufficiently to bring the shoes into immediate contact with the -wheels, in consequence of which the momentum of the two cars could not be checked, and they struck the rear of the standing train with such velocity that [590]*590the three cars were driven ahead,-closing the space between them and the-, engine so quickly that H-an-rahan was crushed between . the -engine and- the car and received injuries from which he died. ■ ■ •

_ At the. close of the plaintiff’s evidence the defendant' moved for .a dismissal of the complaint,- which motion was renewed at the close . •of the-whole evidence, on the grounds that the evidence showed that the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence, that tl-ie ■accident was occasioned by a. risk of his employment, and'that there was no evidence of negligence on. the part of the defendant.. The motion was denied under the defendant’s exception.

The jury found a verdict' for .$5,000, and' from the judgment .-entered thereon this appeal.is taken.. • -.'

The defendant contends that the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence in failing, to use proper care for his own .safety; that there was no sufficient proof of defendant’s negligence in failing to supply a proper brake; that it had no. notice'that the.- -brake' was . ■defective; and that if the chain was defective, it was the duty of. one Herbert, a f ello w7ser van t pf the deceased, to discover and report it before the cars left the I).. 0. yard,-and'for his failure- to do so the defendant is not liable-; and that, unless -the defect was discernible by reasonable inspection, or if it arose while the car was going from the D. 0...yard to the standing.train,.it was .one of the ordinary risks of Hanrahan’s employment for which the defendant is not liable. • •

Upon the question of Hanrahan’s contributory negligence -it ■appears that he was a car inspector at Van Sickleñ avenue.- West-erfield, called as'a witness for the plaintiff, testified-: “.I had seen ITanrahan around there that morning before this accident happened, ■and on many occasions before I had seen him both on the structure- •and on- the track inspecting, and his inspection was of the trucks - underneath the cars, all parts of the'car — the drawbars .and all that ■■sort óf thing. 1 couldn’t say liow long those two cars that I was riding Lad been at Van SI olden avenue. ITanrahan. got there first in the morning. It was his duty to inspect the cars at that station before they were sent out and when they came in.”

- There is a distinction to be observed as tó. the location of Ha-nra- . Iran’s duty, both as to time and. place. I think -that the fair con- ■ struction of the evidence is that it was his duty to inspect the cars [591]*591at and only after their arrival at the Van Sicklen avenue station and not in the D. O. yard; so that, if the alleged defect in the brake occurred • before the car left the D. O. yard, or before it arrived at the Van Sicklen avenue station, it cannot fairly be said that his duty of inspection gave him opportunity to know that the brake was out of order, and I assume this to be the fact in my discussion of the situation; but he knew that the method of making up the train already mentioned was the usual one, and also that it was a snowy and freezing morning, and that if on such a morning the operation of the brake was liable to be disordered by reason of the snow or other cause, so that there was danger that the brakes would not work, or that the momentum of the cars could not he checked, he took upon himself the risk predicated upon this knowledge when he entered the space between the engine and the cars without notifying any one of his intention to do so.

Kelly, the engineer, called by the plaintiff as a witness, testified that when it was necessary for Hanráhan to go between the cars it was the custom to notify somebody of the fact, because in coupling cars there was always some movement; and that no such notice was given by TIanrahan on this occasion. He was bound to know that there was danger of a collision between the two parts of the train which might suddenly and violently close the space between the engine and the forward car, so that either he took the risk of the situation or he was guilty of contributory negligence in entering the open space without proper precaution, notice or observation, and this prevents a recovery.

I am also of the opinion that the plaintiff has not shown negligence on the part of the defendant in furnishing improper appliances, sufficient to establish its liability. Car 212 was a Gilbert car, one of many similar ones used by the defendant, and it had been in use for a long time with this particular brake and chain, and was not different in its description from the other cars which were used by the company. Besides, Herbert, car inspector at the D. 0. yard, testified that he was on duty from the evening before until seven o’clock of the morning of the accident, which occurred at about six o’clock; that his duty was to look over brakes, wheels, shoes and all running gear at the yard, and that he inspected all such cars that morning; that he used a lamp in making the inspection [592]*592and inspected the brakes, the running gear, the chains, the shoes and everything, to see if the ears were in good shape to go out; that they were in good condition, and. that no chains on the brakes of any one car were longer than those on the others.

There was also undisputed evidence that tlie foreman car inspector, O’Gara, and another car inspector, McDonald, within a few hours after the accident, no change being shown meanwhile, examined car 212 as .to the brakes, chains and running gear, and made a practical test of the brake and found that, upon winding it : up in the usual manner, the shoe was properly brought against the wheel. " ■ . ■

Webster, the foreman and master car builder of the Manhattan Elevated railroad in New York, also examined car 212, although' the time of his examination does not appear, and found- the brake . staff, chain and brake in good order, such as is usual on a car of this character.

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Related

Maimone v. Dry Dock, East Broadway & Battery Railroad
58 A.D. 383 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1901)
Hanrahan v. Brooklyn El. R.
51 N.Y.S. 1142 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1898)
Yaggle v. Allen
24 A.D. 594 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1898)

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Bluebook (online)
17 A.D. 588, 45 N.Y.S. 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanrahan-v-brooklyn-elevated-railroad-nyappdiv-1897.