Madden v. Delaware, L. & W. R.

234 F. 731, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1507
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedAugust 11, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 234 F. 731 (Madden v. Delaware, L. & W. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madden v. Delaware, L. & W. R., 234 F. 731, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1507 (N.D.N.Y. 1916).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge.

The defendant leases and operates a railroad running from Binghamton, N. Y., to Syracuse, N. Y., through the city of Cortland, formerly the village of Cortlandville. In 1852 the lands involved here were acquired by the Syracuse & Binghamton Railroad Company, and in 1867 they passed by conveyance to the Syracuse & Southern Railroad Company, later Syracuse, Binghamton & New York Railroad Company, defendant’s lessor. A railroad was constructed across these lands long prior to 1867, and at that time (1867) there was no highway or public street across same at the place in question, but some time prior to September 1, 1875, a road or public highway (now known as Elm street) came into public use across this property at the place in question extending from Church street, run[732]*732ning north and south about parallel with the railroad and west of the same, and up to such railroad tracks, and later this highway by public use and travel up to September 1, 1875, was extended on east to Pomeroy street east of the railroad which street runs parallel with it. Whether this public highway by user was worked and whether it had walks does not appear. •

September 1, 1875, the authorities of Cortlandville village duly adopted a resolution accepting said Elm street from the railroad easterly to Pomeroy street as one of its public streets. It , does not appear when or how Elm street westerly of said railroad became one of the streets of the village, now city of Cortland, and I think it immaterial. Easterly from the railroad .on the south side of Elm street there was a sidewalk, extending up to the tracks, prior to 1904, but who constructed it or repaired it does not appear. In 1904, there were changes made at this crossing at Elm street. The existing tracks of the railroad were raised some 4 or 5 inches and the existing sidewalk at this place in question (where the defect existed and the accident occurred) was raised and reconstructed. While the walk on the south side of Elm street was raised above the surface of the earth making the rise at the approach to the tracks more gradual and easy, the space below was not filled in and the result was a considerable space between the walk, which was constructed of boards or planks, and the earth beneath. , Consequently if one of the planks or a considerable portion thereof was worn out or removed and a traveler thereon should step into the open space or hole his foot and limb would go down some distance and he would be liable to lose his equilibrium and fall, and, depending on circumstances, more or less serious results might follow. From spring about March or April, 1914, and continuously down to and including the night of September 21, 1914, there was a hole in this sidewalk, the part that had been elevated above the surface of the ground, which was some 18 inches to 2 feet in length, measuring from side to side of the walk, and about 6 or 7 inches wide, and on the part thereof on the railroad company’s land and right of way and only a few feet from the most easterly rail. It was not large enough to attract attention in the nighttime nor small enough so that a traveler on the walk could step thereon with impunity or without danger of his foot and limb going therein and he being caught and thrown if moving. In short it was a dangerous hole and a dangerous defect on the walk. It was but a few feet- from the flag shanty of defendant’s flagman stationed at this crossing, and its existence must have been well known to that employé and servant of defendant. Its existence was thoroughly proved, as well as the time it had been there. The evidence tended to show that this particular plank by reason of dozy wood or rot had become broken about the center of the walk where it rested on the center sill of the walk and after being broken in had become detached on that side of the walk and had been then thrown or shoveled to one side leaving this dangerous hole in the walk on that side of it. It. was a dangerous defect and one easily repaired with a piece of plank 2 to 3 feet long and 6 inches wide, a hammer, a saw or an axe, and a few nails. Repair [733]*733did not call for expert or engineering skill or even tlie skill of a carpenter. Any ordinary workman possessing ordinary common sense could have repaired the defect in 10 minutes if provided with 25 cents’ worth of plank, one cent’s worth of nails, a hammer and a saw, or for want of that an axe. The necessity of repair was obvious. Repair (unless the Legislature has so ordained) did not demand a meeting of the five commissioners of public works of the city of Cortland, formal resolutions of that body and a notice to the railroad to repair and the assessment and levy of a tax to meet and cover the expense. Neither did repair of this defect demand a meeting of the board of directors of the railroad company. It was a repair that should have been made and which could have been made without inconvenience to any one within a half hour after its existence was discovered. If the repair of this dangerous defect in this walk was not devolved on the railroad company by the charter of the city on its discovery or within a reasonable time thereafter without a meeting of the commissioners of public works of the city of Cortland and a determination by that board of city officials as to the size and character of the plank that should be put in to take the place of the broken piece to fill a hole 2% feet long and 6 inches wide, and just how and when it should be done and the cost to be incurred in doing it, followed by notice of this official action to the railroad company — in short without the expenditure of more ink than necessary plank — then the Legislature of the state of New York has demonstrated its ability as an adept in the art of “How not to do it.” Many lawyers drawing large fees have wrangled and many judges of experience and ability have studied and differed and written learned and conflicting opinions, and many clients have had their pocketbooks emptied and bank accounts depleted in efforts to ascertain the true meaning of statutes or charters similar to that of the city of Cortland, the product of the wisdom, •or want of wisdom, of the lawmakers of the state of New York. And the question whether this plaintiff has the right to maintain this action and a right to the amount awarded by the jury depends on the proper construction and interpretation of the charter of the city of Cortland which, it must be confessed, is somewhat ambiguous and susceptible of at least three constructions.

But the intent and purpose of the statute to make the abutting owner or occupant, in this case the railroad company, liable to the city for the expense of the repair of a sidewalk, or liable to make the repairs on notice, etc., from the city and answer in damages to the city in case it does not repair, or liable directly to a person who is injured by reason of the failure of the railroad to make repairs when it knows of the defect, is plain. There was no evidence in this case that the defect had been brought to the attention of the city or its authorities, or that it had taken any action in relation thereto or given the railroad company notice to repair. On the evening of September 21, 1914, this plaintiff Robert H. Madden had been down Elm street easterly of the railroad tracks on business and was returning walking westerly on this plank walk on the south side of the street in the neighborhood of 11 o’clock. There were some high buildings on [734]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
234 F. 731, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madden-v-delaware-l-w-r-nynd-1916.