Meinrenken v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad

81 A.D. 132, 80 N.Y.S. 1074
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 81 A.D. 132 (Meinrenken v. New York Central & Hudson River 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
Meinrenken v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad, 81 A.D. 132, 80 N.Y.S. 1074 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

This is a statutory action to recover for the death of plaintiff’s intestate, ivhich it is alleged was caused by the defendant’s negligence. The defendant owns and operates a railroad along the easterly shore of the Hudson river from West Thirtieth street to Spuyten Duyvil, consisting of two main tracks with a siding upon either side crossing One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street. There are public highway crossings at grade at One Hundred and Thirty-fourth and One Hundred and Thirty-eighth streets. Between these points there is no intersecting street crossing, and the tracks run north and south in nearly a straight line, close to the river, with an elevation to the east. The decedent was a member of the Lampe Fishing Club, which had its headquarters in a little boat house about two hundred feet south of One Hundred and Thirty-eighth street, the westerly end of which rested on piles driven into the river bottom, and the easterly end ivas supported by a retaining wall extending partially along the water’s edge. The members reached the club house both from One Hundred and Thirty-fourth and One Hundred and Thirty-eighth streets. The width of One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street is sixty feet, and the pavement over the crossing is forty feet wide. Between the tracks and the river, from [134]*134One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street north to about the line of One Hundred and Thirty-fifth street continued, there was a paved way used by the public to walk and drive over, but this seems to have been on the defendant’s right of way. North of this there was a bulkhead' and a narrow space or path west of defendant’s tracks to the boat house. The club was composed principally of laboring meii, who went there to fish in the evening.

The decedent had been a member for several years, and attended there frequently in the evening during this period. He was there on. the evening of the 20th day of July, 1901, and two or three minutes before nine o’clock, in company with another member, he started south from the club to go to his home on Manhattan street. There was a regular south-bound passenger train which crossed One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street at about one minute after nine in the evening, which seems to have become well known to the club members, and is spoken of as the Dolly Varden.” The theory of the plaintiff is that the decedent was struck by this train. Although there is evidence indicating that the train was going faster than usual, the undisputed evidence shows that it arrived at the station below on time that night. The evidence shows that the decedent’s body was found between the rails of the south-bound track, from five or ten feet to half a car-length north of the paved portion of One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street, which, assuming that the pavement is in the middle of the street, extends to within about ten feet of the' north line of the street, and part of the body of his companion was found about one hundred feet south of the crossing, and the other part about the middle of the crossing. The main tracks were used for both passenger and freight trains.

The only person who testifies that he saw these men after they left the club house is one Smith, who was called as a witness for. the plaintiff. He says that he was fishing from the dock at One Hundred and Thirty-eighth street from six o’clock in the evening until about eight, when he went down to One Hundred and Twenty-ninth street to meet “ a couple of * *' * fellows,” but,' not meeting them, lie started back, walking on the railroad between the main tracks until he reached One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street, where he waited simply to watch a freight train of about sixty cars pass north "On the north-bound track, and not with any desire to cross to the [135]*135east; that while standing between the main tracks on the south side of the crossing at One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street, he saw two men, ten or fifteen feet north of him, coming down the paved way which is parallel to and west of the tracks; that the freight train was going about fifteen miles an hour, and she was puffing pretty heavy, and the rattle of the bumpers and the chains — you couldn’t hear nothing come; ” that when he next saw these men they were standing side by side between the south-bound track and the westerly siding, five or six feet behind and about the same distance to. the south of him, and he saw them look north along the track; that he looked tip the track and saw the passenger train approaching; and then, contradicting himself, he states that he was not able to see either the train or headlight or hear any bell or whistle, although his sight and hearing were both good; that the night was very dark, and the smoke from the freight engine settled down on the crossing and made it so much darker that he could not see anything; but that the smoke “ was not exactly so thick ” that he could not see a good headlight; that this smoky condition lasted until half the freight train had passed over the crossing, which was about the time the passenger train came-; that after he looked around and saw the men, and before he had time to look north again, the passenger train went by like a flash of lightning,” and the suction of the wind threw him over against the freight train and “ by luck” he caught a bar or handle at the end of one of the cars and drew himself up on a step until the passenger train passed, when he says he ■dropped off before reaching a point opposite One Hundred and Thirty-fifth street, and went back and found the bodies of the two ■men.

The complaint seems to have been framed upon the theory that this paved way running north from One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street between the tracks and the river was a public way, and that the decedent was struck by the train while on it at or near ” the ' crossing of One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street. If the decedent was not on the crossing of One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street, but was walking down or alongside the tracks from the club house, he was a mere licensee at most, and the liability of the defendant would have to be determined upon principles and evidence entirely different from those applicable or controlling in the case of an injury [136]*136at .a public crossing. The defendant objected to any evidence tending- to show that the accident occurred on the public crossing, and excepted to the charge of the court by which the case was submitted to the jury solely upon the theory that the decedent was struck upon the crossing of One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street. Ho motion was made to amend the complaint to conform to the proof. This would seem to be error, as it is very doubtful whether under the complaint the verdict could be sustained on the theory on which .the case was thus submitted to the jury.

We are, however, of opinion that the verdict is against the weight, of the evidence and contrary to the probabilities of the case. There were freight cars standing on each siding, both north and south of the crossing. If, as claimed by the only eye witness, the decedent came down the paved way to the west of the tracks and passed around the cars on this siding onto the paved crossing, it is inconceivable that his body should be found five or ten feet or a greater distance north of the paved part of the crossing. Assuming that he was struck by the south-bound train, Smith at no time located the decedent anywhere near as. far north as the body was found and certainly the probabilities are that his body would not be moved north by being struck by the locomotive of a train moving south.

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Bluebook (online)
81 A.D. 132, 80 N.Y.S. 1074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meinrenken-v-new-york-central-hudson-river-railroad-nyappdiv-1903.