Lee v. City Brewing Corporation

18 N.E.2d 628, 279 N.Y. 380, 1939 N.Y. LEXIS 868
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 18 N.E.2d 628 (Lee v. City Brewing Corporation) 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
Lee v. City Brewing Corporation, 18 N.E.2d 628, 279 N.Y. 380, 1939 N.Y. LEXIS 868 (N.Y. 1939).

Opinion

Rippey, J.

The accident out of which this action arose happened between 5:30 and 6:00 p. M. on December 31, 1936, at the intersection between Old Country road and School street in Westbury, Nassau county, when defendant’s truck, partly loaded, and moving along Old Country road in a westerly direction crashed into the right side of a Plymouth sedan which was driven by plaintiff’s intestate in a northerly direction out of School street. The truck drove the passenger car forward *383 and finally came to rest, bottom side up, on top of the small car, near the fence on the northerly side of Old Country road and some eighty feet or more westerly of the point of collision. The Plymouth car was demolished and plaintiff’s intestate received injuries from which he died on the following day. The truck was badly wrecked. The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff but the judgment entered thereon was set aside by the Appellate Division, as matter of law, and the complaint was dismissed.

Counsel for respondent strenuously urges that the only inference possible from the testimony of Frykberg, the driver of the truck, coupled with the evidence of existing conditions is that deceased disobeyed the statutory requirements or rules governing the right of way and also the admonition of the concededly existent traffic stop sign and heedlessly and recklessly drove into the intersection immediately into the path of defendant’s oncoming truck ” and was, therefore, guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law. The Appellate Division so decided.

The burden of establishing contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff’s intestate rested upon the defendant (Decedent Estate Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 13), § 131). It does not follow that evidence produced only by defendant may be available to it in meeting that burden. The defendant could take advantage of any evidence in the case, by whomsoever produced, to establish that defense (Fitzpatrick v. International Ry. Co., 252 N. Y. 127, 134). It is still essential, however, that defendant shall have available some evidence from which it may be reasonably and necessarily inferred, to the exclusion of inferences to the contrary, that the deceased violated the duty cast upon him of exercising such care and caution for his own safety as reasonable prudence dictated and that the violation of that duty contributed proximately to the accident. Nonsuit cannot follow mere failure on the part of plaintiff to produce evidence to the contrary.

*384 Frykberg, the driver of the truck, was the only occupant of the truck and the only eyewitness to the accident. He was examined on two different occasions before trial and he also testified at official investigations of the accident. Upon the trial, plaintiff read his testimony taken on the examinations before trial in which he testified to facts necessary to plaintiff’s case. After plaintiff rested her case, defendant called him to the stand and he testified to facts designed to absolve himself from blame for the accident. No one was available to contradict some of his statements. He was still in defendant’s employ at the time of the trial. On material points, his testimony on direct and cross-examination at the trial was contradictory and statements made on the various occasions on which he was examined were contradictory to and inconsistent with each other. He was an interested witness. His credibility, the reconciliation of his conflicting statements, a determination of which should be accepted and which rejected* and the truthfulness and accuracy of his testimony, whether contradicted or not, were exclusively for the jury, the trier of the facts (McDonald v. Metropolitan Street Ry. Co., 167 N. Y. 66; Sharp v. Erie R. R. Co., 184 N. Y. 100, 106; Piwowarski v. Cornwell, 273 N. Y. 226, 229). The court could not put its finger upon any particular item of testimony by Frykberg and say, as matter of law, that it was the truth.

Frykberg said he was unable to give any estimate of the speed of the Plymouth car. He said that when he was about twenty feet from the intersection driving at twenty-five miles per hour, he glanced to the left and saw decedent’s car approaching and that the headlights were burning. He said the Plymouth car was then twenty feet south of the dirt shoulder on the south side of Old Country road, again that it was forty-five feet away, again that it traveled only five feet from the time he first saw it until he struck it, and he later changed this' to forty-five feet. Which statement was to be taken as *385 true? The distance from the south edge of the dirt shoulder to the point of collision was approximately thirty feet. Deceased then travelled either five feet or fifty feet or seventy-five feet while Frykberg was travel-ling twenty feet, according to which statement of the witness, if either, is to be taken as true. The jury were entitled to disregard the testimony entirely. There was nothing else upon which any inference could be drawn concerning the speed of the sedan as it approached the point of collision. Frykberg said that he (Frykberg) gave no signal of his approach to the intersection until about twenty feet therefrom or, again, until an instant before the collision when he saw the Plymouth sedan immediately in front of him. A near-by resident heard no signal. Frykberg gave no testimony that he saw what the deceased was doing or that he saw him at all. He testified merely that the car was moving as above indicated and that it passed through the intersection in front of him.

It appeared that there was a sign on the side of School street twenty feet south of Old Country road directing operators of moving vehicles to stop for through traffic. The sign did not contain the words full stop.” At no point in Frykberg’s testimony did he say, nor is there any other evidence from which any inference may be drawn, that the car of deceased did not stop at or before it reached the traffic sign. In the absence of such evidence, the jury might infer that he did stop since he was presumed to obey the directions if he saw the sign or knew of its presence and of the presence of traffic. There is no evidence in the case that failure to stop, if there was any such failure, was in violation of any ordinance since no ordinance was proven nor did it appear by what authority the sign was erected. If presumed to have been erected by the State Traffic Commission (Vehicle & Traffic Law, § 95-d [Cons. Laws, ch. 71]; Meadows v. Lewis, 235 App. Div. 243), its wording *386 was merely a warning sign to stop for through traffic and not for a “ full stop ” if there was no such traffic present (Cf. Countryman v. Breen, 274 N. Y. 470). Its presence, however, might be considered by the jury, as the court charged, on the question of whether deceased was guilty of contributory negligence. Even though the deceased had an absolute duty to stop (Manard v. Sheppard, 243 App. Div. 265; McMahon v. Halsall, 18 La. App. 1; Washington v. City of Seattle, 170 Wash. 371; Cox v. Bell,

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.E.2d 628, 279 N.Y. 380, 1939 N.Y. LEXIS 868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-city-brewing-corporation-ny-1939.