Neumann v. Hudson County Consumers Brewing Co.

155 A.D. 271, 139 N.Y.S. 1028, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9113
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 14, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 155 A.D. 271 (Neumann v. Hudson County Consumers Brewing Co.) 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
Neumann v. Hudson County Consumers Brewing Co., 155 A.D. 271, 139 N.Y.S. 1028, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9113 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Carr, J.:

On July 12, 1911, early in the afternoon of a bright, clear day, a young girl about twelve years of age was riding a bicycle across the main highway in the village of Sparkill, in Rockland county. She had been at the post office in the village, and was returning home in an easterly direction across said highway. She had come out from a lateral highway which crossed the main road. As she was at or near the center of the main highway she came into collision with a heavily laden motor truck, and the rear wheel of her bicycle appears to have been struck by the front right-hand wheel of the motor truck. Her bicycle was swerved around and she and it were thrown under the wheels of the oncoming truck. Injuries resulted to her which caused her death. The plaintiff, her father, has obtained a judgment against the defendant, the owner of the motor truck, for the sum of $4,000 and taxed costs. From this judgment, as well as from an order denying a motion for a new trial, the defendant appeals. The grounds of the appeal are that the verdict was not only against the weight of evidence, but that there was in fact no evidence to show negligence on the part of the defendant and freedom from contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, and there is likewise urged an exception taken to a part of the charge of the trial court.

A number of witnesses were produced by the plaintiff to show [273]*273the circumstances preceding and attending the happening of the accident. Of these but two claim to have seen the happening of the accident itself. One of them is the witness Robinson, and the other one Corwin. Evidence was given to show that the motor truck was being driven south on the main highway at a rate of speed estimated by one witness for the plaintiff at from twelve to fifteen miles an hour, and that, as it approached the intersecting highway, no horn was sounded to give warning. The defendant’s driver admitted that no horn had been sounded by him, and he gave reason for such fact by stating that, though he was looking ahead, there was no one in front of him on the highway, and hence he gave no warning. The plaintiff’s witness Robinson testified that he was at work at the railway station platform, which he estimated to be about 125 to 150 feet away from the spot at which the collision took place; that he had noticed the young girl on her bicycle about to cross the main highway when the auto truck came along and hit her bicycle and knocked her and it under the front left wheel of the truck. The part of the truck which struck the child, according to his testimony, was the right-hand side of the machine, the front wheel on the right-hand side of the machine,” and that the blow swung the the child’s bicycle around. When he first noticed her, immediately before the accident, she was a few feet in front of the auto, probably two or three.” The auto was going south and the girl was going easterly. The witness Corwin, who was at the same place with Robinson, testified that they were located about 300 feet away from the point of the accident, and that his attention was attracted by hearing a scream, and looking in the direction from which the sound came, he saw the child on the main highway near the center of the road, close to the oncoming motor truck, and that he noticed that she turned her bicycle to the south and went along for about 5 feet in front of the truck," then the front right-hand wheel of the truck struck the rear wheel of her bicycle and threw her down and passed over her. The negligence claimed on the part of the defendant was that the auto truck was running at a high rate of speed and gave no warning of its approach, and that had its [274]*274driver been exercising proper care he should have noticed the presence of the child on the main highway and so operated his machine as to have avoided injury to her under the circumstances. The driver of the defendant testified that at the time of the accident his machine was going at the rate of from five to six miles an hour; that he had slowed down as he approached the cross road, the existence of which was known to him, because he was about to stop at a store about a block further, on, and that his machine had three speeds, but it had been geared to the third or high speed at the time of the accident; that had he seen the child, it was so equipped that it could have been brought to stop within a few seconds, but that he did not see the child at all, and was not aware of any accident until he heard a sound as if a chain had snapped, and he then swerved to the side and brought his truck to a stop in about 40 or 50 feet, and he then saw the child lying on the road. There is no controversy in the case that the auto truck passed over the child, thus injuring her fatally. The case was submitted to the jury by the trial court on a theory stated in the charge as follows: “’No liability can be predicated in this case upon neglect to give any warning by the sounding of a horn when this auto truck came on the highway. Of course if there was nothing there that was. apparent, it would make no difference, and if it was daylight and the auto truck could be seen coming, it is -unnecessary to give an alarm if you can see the object coming on; you know there is danger if you continue in its path. The plaintiff to recover in this case must recover upon the theory that at the time this accident occurred the negligence of the defendant was in the operation and management of this machine at that time when the conditions became apparent, if at all, to the driver. People who are using a highway, either with vehicles or as pedestrians — vehicles in this case, the girl upon her bicycle and this motor vehicle of the defendant — have equal rights. They must so conduct themselves, the law says, as not to commit unnecessary injury to another, and if they see a certain condition in front of them and they know that that condition is likely to do harm to the other person, they must stop. That is common sense, gentlemen.”

[275]*275The plaintiff offered considerable evidence to show that the spot at which the accident took place was visible from the oncoming motor truck for a considerable distance, but that, to one emerging from the intersecting road, vehicles approaching from the south on the main road, as was this motor truck, were not visible for any considerable distance. There is no proof in the case showing whether the child had glanced in a southerly direction before she went on to the main highway. From the testimony of Corwin, there is a probable inference that the child did not discover the oncoming motor truck until she was about to go either immediately in front of it or to strike its side at the front, and that the swerving of the bicycle in a southerly direction was caused by her just as she screamed, and in order to avoid a collision. There was evidence on the part of some of the plaintiff’s witnesses that as the motor truck passed along the highway it made a noise loud enough to be heard within some of the adjoining houses. The evidence of the defendant’s driver, and of the two men who sat on the front seat of the truck with him, was to the effect that they were looking straight ahead and never saw the child at all. This is explainable, according to the testimony of several witnesses called by the defendant, by the claimed fact that after the child left the post office she continued for a short distance on a dirt sidewalk in front of a store, and that she left the sidewalk to cross the main highway practically just as the motor truck had come to that spot.

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Related

Raimondo v. Harding
41 A.D.2d 62 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1973)
Plante v. State
200 Misc. 396 (New York State Court of Claims, 1950)
Neumann v. Hudson County Consumers Brewing Co.
159 A.D. 921 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 A.D. 271, 139 N.Y.S. 1028, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neumann-v-hudson-county-consumers-brewing-co-nyappdiv-1913.