Leggett v. City of Watertown

93 A.D. 80, 86 N.Y.S. 982
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 93 A.D. 80 (Leggett v. City of Watertown) 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
Leggett v. City of Watertown, 93 A.D. 80, 86 N.Y.S. 982 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Stover, J.:

This is an action to recover damages by reason of an alleged defect in a highway. The highway in question is a public street in the city of Watertown, leading to and over a bridge, the point at which the accident occurred being upon premises adjoining and contiguous to the bridge and the sidewalk leading from the bridge in front of the abutting premises. The walk from the bridge leading northerly was supported partly by a wall and by upright pieces of timber.

The evidence showed that adjoining the sidewalk was a platform, .and steps leading to it, which was used by the abutting owner in conjunction with his property. Between the easterly edge of the sidewalk and the building upon the abutting property, called the Dixon property, was a space of about six feet. This space was occupied by a platform extending from the north end of the bridge and in front of the Dixon premises about twenty feet. The plat[82]*82form was higher than the sidewalk, and was reached by means of three steps which ran along the front of the platform, and occupied about two feet of the. width, leaving about four feet of platform between the steps and the Dixon building.'

The steps at the westerly end of the platform, and which form .the approach to the platform, according to the plaintiff’s version, rested upon the easterly edge of the sidewalk, and, as one or more of the witnesses gave it, projected about two inches on the sidewalk.

There was an iron railing at the easterly side of the bridge extending to the southerly side of the platform, and at the northerly side of the platform the iron railing was continued along the easterly edge of the sidewalk, the opening in the iron railing being the length of the platform which was used as. an approach to the Dixon premises.

At the time of the accident a number of people had collected for the purpose of witnessing an exhibition of daring by a man who had advertised that he would jump from the top of the bridge into the river below.

■ The accident occurred on Memorial Day, 1898. The testimony of the plaintiff is that as he was passing down the street and came to the bridge he saw a large crowd there; that the crowd was so large on the walk it was impossible to get through, so he took the roadway across the bridge; that he pushed his way through there, • and after he got across the bridge he undertook to get on the board walk again; and finally, after working through, he got as far as the Dixon property, and owing to not having his truss on he found he had trouble from a rupture in the groin; that he put his foot upon one of the steps and leatied over, and made a pressure with his thigh to adjust the: breach that when he had been there but a'minute of-two the crowd came and rushed onto the board walk, and he was standing with his left foot upon the bridge walk, when the walk and platform and all went down, and he went with it. Beneath the platform on the Dixon property was an open space about fifteen to twenty feet deep.

The evidence as to the condition of the walk after the accident is somewhat conflicting. The walk itself did not fall, but some of the “witnesses testified that it sank on the easterly side when the plat[83]*83form gave way, and the boards were tipped up, the lower portion being towards the easterly side of the walk. The evidence showed that the plaintiff was injured by the fall.

This case was before this court on a former appeal (55 App. Div. 321). Upon that appeal a judgment of nonsuit was reversed and a new trial ordered. The rule governing the case as presented up’on that appeal, and which was necessary to the decision of that appeal, was as follows: “ It was the duty of the municipality to construct and maintain sidewalks over and along its thoroughfares which should be reasonably safe for the use of such pedestrians as had occasion to pass over them; and if it knowingly permitted the safety and efficiency of any of its walks to become in any manner impaired, either by their own inherent infirmity or by the conjunction of an unsafe structure erected by an adjoining owner, it violated its plain duty and subjected itself to the consequences which flowed therefrom.”

This is the correct rule and should have been applied upon the retrial of the case. This rule was charged almost verbatim by the trial court, but in connection therewith this language was used : “ So if you find that the plaintiff received his injury upon that occasion through a defect in that sidewalk or through a defect in the structure in connection and conjunction therewith,-this platform and the surroundings and the structures and the timbers that are about it, if he received his injury from either of those causes, then you must find a vérdict, if you find the other questions, in favor of the plaintiff. That I charge you to be the law in this case; that it makes no difference whether it was from the defective condition of the sidewalk or from the defective condition of the platform and steps and structure, if he received his injury from that and-” Plaintiff’s counsel: “Your Honor, in conjunction- The Court: I have already said in conjunction with the sidewalk. I think I have charged that plain enough. If I have not, I will charge that later on. If you should find in this case that the plaintiff is right, in other words, that the plaintiff was free from contributory negligence, that the city, the defendant, had actual notice of more than twenty-four hours of the unsafe condition of this sidewalk ■-” Plaintiff’s counsel: “Forty-eight hours. The Court: Forty-eight hours, of this sidewalk, and that from that defective condition of the sidewalk or [84]*84the structure connected therewith, he received his injury, you will then approach the question of damages.”

.Again, the court was asked to charge that if the jury found that the sidewalk remained intact at and during the accident, there could • be no recovery. “The Court: What do you mean by intact? Do you mean the sidewalk itself or this structure and its connections with the other structure, if there was connection ? ” Defendant’s counsel: “ No, I mean the sidewalk between the roadbed and the railing and the Dixon steps. The Court: If you mean simply the planks of the sidewalk itself remained intact, I refuse to charge it in that way.”

And so, when asked to charge that if the jury found the sidewalk remained intact and that the plaintiff if he had continued with both his feet upon the sidewalk would not have suffered the accident in question, there could be no' recovery, the court again said: “ I will so charge in case they find that there was no connection between this other structure and the sidewalk.”

When asked again to charge that if the injury came to the plaintiff from causes outside of the highway there could be no recovery, he charged that that would be so, if not connected with .the highway in any manner.

.Again, when asked to charge that it was immaterial whether any of the planks were or were not decayed, the request was refused, and it was left to the jury to say whether it was material or not.

And finally, when -requested by defendant’s counsel to charge that the defendant was only liable for its structure and its safe maintenance, the court charged: “ I charge the jury on that question that the defendant is liable for either by their own inherent infirmity of the sidewalk and its structure, or by the conjunction of an unsafe structure erected by an adjoining owner; that is the Dixon property in this case.”

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Related

Eagan v. City of Buffalo
105 Misc. 506 (New York Supreme Court, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 A.D. 80, 86 N.Y.S. 982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leggett-v-city-of-watertown-nyappdiv-1904.