O'Keefe v. Eighth Avenue Railroad

33 A.D. 324, 53 N.Y.S. 940
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 33 A.D. 324 (O'Keefe v. Eighth Avenue 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
O'Keefe v. Eighth Avenue Railroad, 33 A.D. 324, 53 N.Y.S. 940 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.:

The plaintiff sought to recover damages for the fracture and permanent injury of his right arm, which was run over by one of. the wheels of a heavily loaded truck which the plaintiff himself had been driving easterly on the southerly side of Canal street near West Broadway, on September 11, 1893. The claim is that the plaintiff was violently thrown from his truck in consequence of a collision with one of the defendant’s street cars which was negligently driven around a curve. The plaintiff’s testimony was that as he approached . the curve where the defendant’s cars turn from Canal street into West Broadway, he noticed one of the cars coming behind, the heads of the horses being then about even with the tail end of the truck, and that the horses traveled eight or ten miles an hour. The heads of the truck horses, according to the plaintiff, were then over the curved track. The car driver struck his horses with his whip, and the plaintiff swung his horses to the right, so that they should not be injured. As he swung the horses the wheel of the truck inclined towards the track, and the car, going around at a rapid rate of speed, hit the hub of the truck and produced a sudden jerk which threw the plaintiff off. The plaintiff is supported by a witness named Cronin, who was his intimate friend and companion, and who on that day had been on the truck and ridden part of the way with him, but had got off and, as he testifies, followed the truck and witnessed the accident, which he described, and which with some variations affirmed the plaintiff’s version of how the accident happened.

On the part of the- defendant there were two witnesses, police officers, who were standing together talking on the north side of Canal street. One of them states that he had his attention attracted to the truck, and that he saw the plaintiff fall off, and that there [326]*326was then no car anywhere near him. He'' is in effect corroborated by the other policeman who, while he did not see the plaintiff actually fall off, had his. attention drawn to the fact that he had fallen, and went to assist the other officer, Frank ; and together they took ' the plaintiff from the street where he was lying to -the north side of Canal street, from which place'he was subsequently removed to the hospital. These officers testify that when the plaintiff was interrogated as to the cause of the accident he made no mention of ■ having been run into by a car.

The first knowledge that the defendant had of the plaintiff’s claim was when it was served with the summons and complaint more than ten months after the accident. The defendant’s theory is, in effect, that the story of the plaintiff was made out of whole cloth; that the idea' of holding the defendant was an aforethought, and that the tes-' timony, not alone of the. plaintiff, but particularly of the witness Cronin, is not only contradictory but incredible.

If it depended alone on these two witnesses, as against the two; officers, there would be considerable force in this contention. But ■ there was another witness, Donnelly, who was the superintendent of the trucking department, or boss truckman, for Leggett & Go.y for whom the plaintiff worked, and who was sent for immediately after the accident. He was asked, with reference to the time when the plaintiff was lying on the north side of Oanal street, partly or. wholly, unconscious, and after lie had given him a drink of whisky to strengthen him, which seems to have brought around consciousness-, whether the plaintiff then made any statement about the cause of the accident, or made any claim against the railroad company. This testimony was given on rebuttal, and as it was favorable to the . plaintiff, it unquestionably had a controlling effect, as can be seen from the facts already recited, on the verdict of the jury, and its reception presents, the main question relied upon on this appeal.

This witness was allowed, in rebuttal, to testify, over the defendant’s objection, that the plaintiff said he was knocked off his truck by an Eighth avenue car. The court also allowed the'plaintiff himself to testify in rebuttal that he told Donnelly he had been knocked off the truck by the Eighth avenue car. .

The general rule of law is that admissions in one’s own favor are inadmissible. To this general rule there are exceptions Admis[327]*327sions constituting part of the res gestee-—that is, statements which are coincident in point of time with the accident — have in certain cases been allowed; and where part of a conversation or statement of a person. is given upon one side, it is permissible to allow the other side to give testimony as to the whole conversation. The appellant here insists, however, that the declarations were in no way related to any conversation that had been inquired into, but were separate and independent statements made in a conversation between Donnelly and the plaintiff, and were .not the same as testified to by the police officers.

The respondent, recognizing the general rule, concedes that such a declaration of the plaintiff, or testimony thereof by the witness Donnelly, would .not be competent at the outset, 'but the ruling made by the court below in admitting it, it is contended, was justh fied, because the defendant, in the endeavor to show that no collision had occurred between the car and the plaintiff’s truck, brought out by the testimony of Frank, the police officer, that the plaintiff did not say anything about such collision while waiting for the ambulance. This witness said that he was with the plaintiff from the' moment that he fell from the truck until he was taken away in the ambulance, and that he was with him at all times when Donnelly was with the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff did not say anything about such a collision. The defendant realized the importance of showing this and introduced that subject, and it was a strong corroboration of the claim that no such occurrence as was testified to by the plaintiff took place. It was equally important to the plaintiff to show that what Frank had testified to was not true. In view of the importance, therefore, of the ruling to both parties, we think it proper, even at the risk of repetition, to detail the order, extent and character of Frank’s testimony and the bearing of that given by the plaintiff and the superintendent, Donnelly, thereupon.

If it had been a separate and independent conversation between ■ the plaintiff and Donnelly, in no way related to the witness Frank, then it would have been incompetent. The latter had testified that, though spoken to on the subject of the cause-of the accident, the plaintiff had made no mention of his truck having been struck by a car. This might have been entirely true, even though the plaintiff had made such a statement to Donnelly; for it might have been made in the ■ [328]*328absence of Frank, and would not, therefore, be competent as showing that what Frank had testified to was untrue. The question, therefore, presented is, whether the testimony of the plaintiff and Donnelly was or was not related to the testimony given by Frank. On that subject we have the latter’s direct examination, in which he says that the plaintiff did not at any time either on the spot where he fell, when he was picked up, or on the sidewalk before he was taken away in the ambulance, make any mention of a car or a collision with a car.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 A.D. 324, 53 N.Y.S. 940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/okeefe-v-eighth-avenue-railroad-nyappdiv-1898.