Lowrey v. Brooklyn City

4 Abb. N. Cas. 32
CourtNew York City Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Abb. N. Cas. 32 (Lowrey v. Brooklyn City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York City Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowrey v. Brooklyn City, 4 Abb. N. Cas. 32 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1878).

Opinion

By the Court.—Neilson, Ch. J.

I am of opinion that the judgment and order from which these appeals were taken should be affirmed.

When the defendant put in the switch to turn their cars at the desired point, they had occasion to take up the cross-walk, part of the pavement of the street. They were bound to replace it with especial reference to the fact, that as the tongue or guard of the switch projected higher than the track of the rail[35]*35road, the pavement should have a corresponding elevation. On the trial the defendants sought to show that they had placed the stones up to the necessary grade. Some of their testimony tended to prove that fact, some of it to prove that the stones were only brought up even, with the track. On behalf of the plaintiff there was testimony to the effect that the stones were not laid up to the top of the switch, that when the sand and gravel on the surface had been swept off, the tongue of the switch was so exposed that, soon thereafter, persons crossing the street tripped and fell. At that time the cross-walk, but for the projecting iron, would seem to have been in good order, but the depression, if slight at first, increased from the use of the street and from natural causes, so that the tongue of the switch extended more than two inches above the stones, when the plaintiff, coming in contact with it, was injured as stated in the complaint.

For the purpose of this case the railroad at that point is to be regarded as having been that of the defendants, as having been maintained and operated by them. The switch had been laid under a license duly granted. The body of it was so placed that it conformed to the track of the Brooklyn City Railroad ; the cars of the latter company passing over its entire length, the cars of these defendants over a part of it. But the tongue or guard of the switch, the sole office of which was to turn the defendant’s cars to their track in Washington street, was in the exclusive use, control and management of these defendants. They had put it there, they could have removed it and substituted another switch or a simple rail; it belonged to them.

In thus placing their switch these defendants were under an implied obligation to have it properly arranged and protected, made safe and kept so (1 Daly, 148; 3 Id. 278). They had no right to maintain and use it in such a condition as to interfere with and be [36]*36injurious to persons crossing the street. The tongue of the switch projecting above the cross-walk was an obstruction for which there was, and could have been, no authority.

On the trial the negligence of the defendants was regarded as essential to their liability. The case was thus properly distinguished from a class of cases in which it was held, as in Creed v. Hartmann, 29 N. Y. 591, and in Congreve v. Smith, 18 Id. 79, that parties who for their own purposes and without authority changed the condition of streets, to the prejudice. of others, might be liable for damages irrespective of the question as to their negligence; and from cases like Reg. v. The United Kingdom E. T. Co., 9 Cox's C. L. C. 174, where the unauthorized erection of telegraphic poles in the street was held to be a nuisance ; and The King v. Wright, 3 B. & Ad. 681, where Lord Tentebdeít, Ch. J., regarded the planting of trees and hedges in the unused parts of the highway, without permission, as worthy of punishment. The sovereign care is devoted to the preservation of the streets for public use, and the distinction between the absence and the abuse of authority is not very marked, save as to the proof and the form of the remedy. That which may seem to impair the street, if duly authorized, is not a nuisance ; that which departs from the line of duty to the prejudice of the citizen, may give rise to a claim for damages. Thus it is that while these defendants were not mere intruders, the manner in which they performed their work and kept and used their switch is to be considered with reference to the question of negligence. If they had been blameless in both respects the license which justified them in interfering with the street would be a protection, otherwise not. In the cases of Fletcher v. The Auburn & S. Railroad Co., 25 Wend. 462, and of Brown v. The Cayuga & S. Railroad Co., 12 N. Y. 486, the legisla[37]*37ture had authorized one of the defendants to build it's road across a street, the other over a water-course, but each company was held liable in damages by reason of the character of the work performed, and of the improper erections held and used. The same principle applies here.

It is no answer to the charge of having maintained a dangerous obstacle in the street,- that the defendants had not, in terms, undertaken to repair the street or cross-walk, but that that duty rested upon the city and the Brooklyn City Railroad Company. If the city and that company should have intervened and so kept up the flagging that the tongue of the switch would have been harmless, the right of this-plaintiff to seek redress from these defendants was as blear as though there had been no other wrong-doer to be pursued (Carpenter v. The Central Park N. &. E. River R. R. Co., 11 Abb. Pr. N. S. 416).

The general instructions given to the jury appear to have been satisfactory, as no exceptions were taken. But at the close of the charge, the learned presiding judge had occasion to speak to several requests of the defendants’ counsel which relate to this branch of the case. Taken as a whole the answers to these requests were not unfavorable to the defendants,- nor did they, as the learned counsel for the defendants suggests, fix upon them the duty of repairing the street or crosswalk. The jury were told that if the cross-walk had been relaid in such a way that no accident could occur by the switch, 'the defendants were not liable)- and that they were to determine whether the work was "properly and skillfully done or not; whether the defendants had failed to keep their track or switch in order. And upon Ms attention having been called to an observation understood to mean that the defendants were to repair the cross-walk, the learned judge said, as his interpretation, that he did not mean the general track out [38]*38their part of it, to keep their switch in order. He further said that it was the defendants’ business to keep their switch on such a grade with reference to the street as to avoid accidents. The answers given to inquiries by the jury are to be taken in the same sense. That those instructions did not relate to the repairing of the street or walk as such, is further evident from the answer given to the request to charge that it was not the business of the De Kalb Avenue Railroad Company (as these defendants are informally called) to keep the cross-walk in repair: “Ho; they have nothing to do with the paving.”

It was not a question as to the mere duty to repair the street. The spirit of the instructions given was, that the defendants were to keep their switch, or, what is the same thing, their track in order. It is obvious that they were to do whatever was necessary, whether by removing the switch, by adopting one with a lower tongue, or by so fencing it in as to render the street reasonably safe for use.

They were bound to do something; they did nothing. If the court had erred in suggesting a remedy that would not be material. The defendants should have devised some mode of obviating the difficulty or have abandoned the use of the switch.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Creed v. . Hartmann
29 N.Y. 591 (New York Court of Appeals, 1864)
Brown v. . the Cayuga and Susquehanna Railroad Co.
12 N.Y. 486 (New York Court of Appeals, 1855)
Sperry v. . Miller
16 N.Y. 407 (New York Court of Appeals, 1857)
McKecknie v. . Ward
58 N.Y. 541 (New York Court of Appeals, 1874)
Fletcher v. Auburn & Syracuse Rail Road
25 Wend. 462 (New York Supreme Court, 1841)
Fash v. Third Avenue Railroad
1 Daly 148 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1861)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Abb. N. Cas. 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowrey-v-brooklyn-city-nycityct-1878.