Hinz v. Eighth Avenue Railroad

215 A.D. 189, 213 N.Y.S. 362, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10936

This text of 215 A.D. 189 (Hinz v. Eighth Avenue 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
Hinz v. Eighth Avenue Railroad, 215 A.D. 189, 213 N.Y.S. 362, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10936 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinions

Merrell, J.

The action was to recover for personal injuries alleged by the plaintiff to have been sustained by reason o'f the negligence of a motorman in the employ of the defendant in operating one of defendant’s surface cars on Central Park West in the borough of Manhattan, New York city. The jury rendered a verdict in plaintiff’s favor at the close of the trial for $20,000 damages.

The accident occurred in the plaza on Eighth avenue or Central Park West at One Hundred and Tenth street, known as Cathedral Parkway. The negligence which the plaintiff charged against the defendant in his complaint was the negligent operation of defendant’s surface car at a high and excessive rate of speed, in failing to give warning by signal or otherwise of the approach of defendant’s car, in failing to check the speed of such car, and in failing to stop the same so as to avoid striking the plaintiff.

The plaintiff was by occupation a porter and at the- time of the trial on April 20, 1925, was sixty-two years of age. On the night in question he was proceeding toward his apartment at 2742 Madison avenue from his work and had alighted from the subway car and had come upon One Hundred and Tenth street west of Eighth avenue. Plaintiff testified that he first crossed from the northerly side to the southerly side of One Hundred and Tenth street, and that he then walked on the sidewalk and started to cross the plaza toward the easterly or park side thereof in accordance with the route usually taken by him. At the point where the plaintiff started to cross there was a plaza through which Eighth avenue or Central Park West ran. The plaza was some[191]*191what elliptical in shape, being about 173 feet wide from east to west and 237 feet from north to south. The double car tracks of the defendant run practically in a northerly and southerly course through the center of the plaza. The easterly track is the north-bound and the westerly track the south-bound track of defendant’s surface road. Near the center of the plaza there are six traffic posts, three on either side of the railroad tracks, set in a semi-circular form, and which form the so-called “ traffic zone ” in the plaza. The plaintiff testified that he started to cross the plaza from the point where the southerly sidewalk on One Hundred and Tenth street extended to the plaza in an easterly direction; that he walked slowly, crossing on a course about fifteen or twenty feet southerly from the traffic posts; that when he was within a step of the westerly or south-bound track of the defendant’s surface road he looked to the north and saw within the safety posts a trolley car of the defendant moving slowly toward him, and that at that time, as he looked, he saw the car moving slowly between the traffic posts and about fifteen or twenty feet away and that an automobile was coming from behind him ; that the automobile, as he stepped upon the track, passed easterly across the track between the plaintiff and the approaching street car, and that as soon as the automobile passed, the car rushed upon the plaintiff and, as he expressed it, the whole thing was over; ” that when the car struck him “ the automobile was already away” and he was between the rails of the south-bound track; that as the trolley car came from behind the passing automobile it shot through or shot by the rear of the automobile. Plaintiff testified that he heard no bell ring, and that the defendant’s car struck him, on the left side; that he fell down and lost consciousness because of an injury bo his leg; that when he regained consciousness he was in the hospital on the day following. Plaintiff testified that the plaza at that point was well lighted by arc lights. His injuries resulted in two operations and the amputation of his right leg, and from November first until January fifteenth he was lying in bed continuously and suffered great pain until the time of the trial. On cross-examination the plaintiff admitted that at the time he approached the defendant’s track and was struck he was walking slowly and continued to walk slowly up to the time when the accident happened; that he saw the street car coming through the traffic posts bound south the first time he saw the car, and that at that time he was just one step away from the west rail of the south-bound track; that the street car was lighted at the time. Plaintiff further testified that he had often crossed the plaza at the same placo.

[192]*192Edward. Monaghan, sworn as a witness in behalf of the plaintiff, testified that he was an eyewitness of the accident, and was driving a Twentieth Century taxicab at the time; that just prior to plaintiff’s being struck he was driving easterly and crossing the circle; that he was following another taxicab which was ahead of him about twelve or fifteen feet, and that as he came out in the circle he looked both ways and noticed the defendant’s trolley car in the traffic safety zone formed by the posts in the middle of the plaza; that the car was south bound and at the time was just creeping toward the southerly end of the zone. Monaghan testified that, as he was following the car ahead of him and when he thought he could pass over the defendant’s tracks ahead of the car the motorman put on power and cut him off; that at that time the defendant’s car was proceeding fast and a great deal faster than it had been traveling within the traffic zone posts; that the defendant’s car passed behind the automobile which had crossed just ahead of Monaghan’s taxicab, and that when he saw he could not cross ahead of the defendant’s car he swung his cab to the right to avoid, being hit; that just at that moment he saw the plaintiff on the defendant’s south-bound track on which the trolley car was running, and that the front of the trolley car struck the plaintiff; that he was spun around and knocked over in front of the cab of the witness and upon the pavement; that the wheels of the trolley car “did not pass over any part of the plaintiff, but that the plaintiff’s right foot caught in the cylinder'box of the forward trucks of the car and he was dragged several feet. Monaghan testified that as he approached the crossing in his automobile he was traveling about twelve miles an hour, and that when his car came to a stop it stood alongside the defendant’s trolley car and about eighteen inches distant therefrom, and that the plaintiff, after being struck, was four or five feet ahead of his car lying upon his face and in a diagonal position toward the northwest from the westerly side of the car. Monaghan testified that he first saw the plaintiff when he was upon the car track just before he was struck, and that at that time he was standing somewhat nearer the easterly rail of the south-bound track than the westerly rail.

Archie Victor Matter, sworn as a witness in behalf of the plaintiff, testified that he ran an automobile repairing and emergency establishment on the southwesterly side of the plaza and in plain view of the place where the accident occurred. Matter testified that he was going to his place of business and seeing a crowd of people, proceeded to the point where he found the plaintiff lying upon the pavement with his right foot caught beneath the defendant’s car. Mattor testified that when he reached the scene of the [193]*193accident the back of the trolley car had not cleared the safety zone.

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Bluebook (online)
215 A.D. 189, 213 N.Y.S. 362, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10936, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinz-v-eighth-avenue-railroad-nyappdiv-1926.