Himes v. the Cole Teaming Co.

98 A. 897, 39 R.I. 504, 1916 R.I. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 3, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 98 A. 897 (Himes v. the Cole Teaming Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Himes v. the Cole Teaming Co., 98 A. 897, 39 R.I. 504, 1916 R.I. LEXIS 60 (R.I. 1916).

Opinion

Baker, J.

This is an action of trespass on the case to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been received by the plaintiff through the negligence of a servant of the-defendant. At the close of the testimony the defendant moved for the'direction of a verdict in its favor on the ground that it had not been shown to be negligent. The motion was denied and to this ruling the defendant excepted. The case was submitted to the jury who returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $300. Whereupon the plaintiff moved for a new trial on the question of damages alone on the ground of their inadequacy, which motion was granted by setting the entire verdict aside, to which ruling the defendant also excepted. The case is before the court on these two exceptions.

The testimony bearing upon the question of the defendant’s liability is in substance as follows: The plaintiff who-was then about sixty-eight and a half years old was injured on Crawford street bridge early in the afternoon of August 2nd, 1913. He had come through Custom House street and proceeded to cross Crawford street bridge on its northerly sidewalk. Some repairs were in progress on the bridge, and in consequence the sidewalk at its eastern end on the west side of South Water street was barricaded so that it became necessary to step from the sidewalk into the street in order to pass the obstruction in going to his destination on South Main street. Without taking particular notice of it as he crossed the bridge he observed a team belonging to the defendant facing towards Custom House street drawn up near the curbing of the sidewalk. There was an open space of about ten feet at the rear of the team into which he stepped in seeking to avoid the obstruction on the sidewalk. He says that he might have taken one pace after stepping off the sidewalk, but judges that almost as soon as he struck the street the team struck him, hitting him in the back, *506 pushing or throwing him down with his elbows and one or both knees upon the ground, the chief resulting injury being to his left knee. He says that the team was not moving when he started to leave the sidewalk, that he didn't know what caused it to back, and that he does not know how near to the rear end of the wagon he was when he left the sidewalk.

Frank J. Bradford testified that on the day of the accident he was standing on the north side of Crawford street bridge close to the rail awaiting the arrival of a suburban car coming from Warren, due at 1:40 P, M., but then “a little bit late.” He was watching workmen loading timber on a low géar near the northeast end of the bridge. While standing there Mr. Himes passed him and started to cross the street. He says that Mr. Himes “started right back of this team, in kind of a diagonal direction. . . . He had probably taken two steps when this team came back into him, struck him . . . about his right shoulder blade and knocked him flat.” The witness did not notice what caused the wagon to go back. While he took no particular notice of the distance of the plaintiff from the team as he stepped from the sidewalk, he would say it was a reasonable distance “a foot or more.” The starting of the team back is what attracted his attention to the plaintiff and the team.

John A. Silvia was a witness for the defendant and testified that in the summer of 1913 he was working as a driver for the Cole Teaming Company, but was working for another employer at the time of the trial. He was in charge of defendant's team at the time of the accident, which was a truck with three horses abreast attached thereto in front. The team was alongside of the curbing on the north side of Crawford street bridge headed or facing to the west. The top or body of the truck was a floor or platform, 16)4 feet long and 6)4 feet wide. There were no sideboards or tailboard.- On the sides of this platform was a “ribbon” or edge about two inches high, with places for stakes. The rear wheels of the truck were set underneath the floor of the *507 truck and no part of them projected out behind its rear end. The truck had been standing there for more than an hour, and while so standing the horses had been fed, but several minutes before the accident, the feed bags had been taken off. While the team stood there a stake had been placed through the spokes of each rear wheel to prevent them from turning around. The truck was not loaded. Just before the accident the driver prepared to drive off with his team. He says that he took the stakes out of the wheels and went on the sidewalk along by the right side of the truck from rear to front in order to get on the team. When he reached the front he stepped upon the “evener” (the cross-bar to which the whiffle-trees are hooked) on which he had to step in order to get up on the seat. Just as he touched the step the horse next the sidewalk started ahead a few inches, perhaps six, as was his habit, and the other two in consequence moved a little to the left. The reins when he started to get up were “on the footboard, between the foot iron and the footboard” and couldn’t be reached by him until he got up on the cross-bar. He stepped up on the footboard and picked up the reins, but whether this was done in the act of stepping up or after he was on the foot-board, does not clearly appear. He says, however, that he “only just picked up the reins” and while standing'on the footboard and before he had sat down, or made any movement to start the team, he heard some one shout, whereupon he looked around “set the reins back again,” got off the team and went to the rear end and then first saw Mr. Himes. He wouldn’t have known that anything had happened, had he not heard the shout. He said nothing to his horses when he was getting up on the truck, and did nothing to cause them to move and states that the team did not move after the shouting. In answer to the question “Was there any motion of these horses or truck backwards then ?” he said: “No, sir, not that I could feel.” The record shows that the word “then” refers to a time after he had got up on the footboard and had the reins in his hands. He also *508 said that he, had driven the horses in question about three-years, and that during that time in order to get them to back he always had to “take hold of the reins.” This in substance is the entire testimony on the question of liability.

Upon this testimony it seems apparent that the movement of the team was practically simultaneous with the plaintiff’s act of stepping from the sidewalk; that this movement was initiated by the off horse starting forward as the driver placed one foot on the evener, or cross-bar; that when he had stepped upon the footboard and had picked up the reins and held them in his hands he heard a shout calling his attention to the accident, which had then already happened. The driver did notice the forward movement, but when asked if there was any motion of the team backwards after he had stepped up on the footboard and had the reins in his hands, answered not that he could feel. It seems probable that the backward movement was then over and that it occurred in the brief interval between his placing his foot on the cross-bar and his reaching a standing; position on the footboard with the reins in his hands.

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Bluebook (online)
98 A. 897, 39 R.I. 504, 1916 R.I. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/himes-v-the-cole-teaming-co-ri-1916.