Osuldsen v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad

213 A.D. 247, 210 N.Y.S. 232, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8467

This text of 213 A.D. 247 (Osuldsen v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western 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
Osuldsen v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad, 213 A.D. 247, 210 N.Y.S. 232, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8467 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Kelly, P. J.:

On August 29, 1923, between five and six o’clock in the afternoon, the plaintiff, fifty-five years of age, while crossing a track in defendant’s railroad terminal yard in Hoboken, was struck by one of defendant’s trains, consisting of an engine and two empty box freight cars, which was backing in an easterly direction towards the river. The locomotive was on the west or land side headed west. Plaintiff was struck by the east end of the east car (which would be the rear car if the train were proceeding ahead instead of backing). The plaintiff was employed on a lighter called the Texas, which was delivering railroad ties to defendant, and which was moored on the north side of a basin or slip running from the river, west, into the terminal." Plaintiff lost his right leg two or three inches above the knee.

Plaintiff slept on the barge Texas at night. The barge had been towed over to the slip or basin on the preceding day, August twenty-eighth. Plaintiff had remained on board on the night of the twenty-eighth. On August twenty-ninth plaintiff and the captain of the Texas had been engaged all day in unloading the ties. They had not completed the unloading and were to continue it the next morning. At the end of the day’s work, about five o’clock, the captain of the barge, whose deposition was read as part of defendant’s case, went home. Plaintiff left the lighter about the same time, to get his supper. He got up on the dock and proceeded across the yard towards the Washington street or Ferry street gate. He had done the same thing the evening before, returning to the lighter the same way.

The fighter was moored to the west of a small ferry stage or landing shown on photographs in evidence, and the plaintiff’s course on leaving the fighter and returning to it would be to the west of this ferry slip, across the yard.

Defendant’s case is based largely on the proposition that people coming from vessels in the slip, in leaving the yard should turn to the east or towards the river, and that in going to the vessels in the slip they should come in from the east or river side. Whereas, plaintiff’s claim is that the nearest way to get out of the yard to his destination, Washington street, Hoboken, was to turn to the [249]*249left or west, and that on returning to the boat, the direct and usual course was to come in through the Washington street gate and cut across the yard to the slip.

This was one of the radical issues in the case, plaintiff producing evidence that boatmen and others were accustomed to use the Washington street gate, and defendant claiming that the proper route was the more roundabout journey by way of the station and ferry house towards the river.

In either case, people coming from or going to boats in the slip had to cross three tracks running parallel to and adjoining the bulkhead.

I do not think there can be any dispute about the fact that plaintiff was rightfully on the lighter. He was a longshoreman by occupation, but followed this particular lighter at the time, being employed through the captain by the hour as an assistant in loading and unloading — sometimes acting as a watchman, although on this particular trip he was not acting as a night watchman, but at the same time he slept on the boat. Defendant says his day’s work was finished and that he was under no obligation to come back to the boat, that the work of unloading was not to be resumed until the morning of the thirtieth. I think plaintiff was rightfully on the boat, and entitled to go from the boat for the purpose of getting his meals, and to return to it to sleep. If at the time of the accident he was following a route usually and customarily taken to get to the boat, he was not a trespasser and was more than a mere licensee. He was a person engaged in transacting business with the defendant and was entitled to the exercise of reasonable care and precaution by defendant to avoid injuring him.

There is a radical difference between the story told by the plaintiff as to the facts of the accident, and the story told by the witnesses called by defendant. There is no dispute that this was the first time the plaintiff had worked at this yard or dock or pier. Relating his experience, he says that having had his supper on the evening of the twenty-ninth he was returning to the boat, coming back by way of the Washington street gate. He had gone out through that gate and came back through it. This was the route he. took the night before (the twenty-eighth). He was to sleep on the boat; the job of unloading the ties had not been completed. He had not been paid his wages. When he left the boat to go to his supper through the Washington street gate, he saw other people going out the same way, and when he returned there were other people walking ahead of him. He came across the yard and reached the three tracks which ran along the bulkhead. He [250]*250says there were cars standing on the second or middle track. He started to cross the tracks and just as he was crossing the middle track, about two feet behind the standing car, it suddenly started or backed down on him without warning. He says there was no one on the cars and that these same cars were standing on the middle track when he left to get his supper. He says they extended east of the point where his boat lay alongside the bulkhead, that is, towards the river, towards the point where the small flat-boat ferry, used in crossing the basin, landed. When he left the fighter to get his supper he had to turn to the east and go around these standing cars in order to cross the three tracks. Coming back he says he crossed the third track which was farthest from the bulkhead, and it was while crossing the second or middle track that the cars backed down on him. He said in answer to a question by the trial justice that he crossed straight over,” that he did not walk along the third track before crossing.

This is entirely contrary to the story told by defendant’s witnesses. Their claim is that the train of two cars on the second track was in motion, backing up. A brakeman who testified that he was on the rear end of the second car standing on the step on the north side of the car, northeast corner, said that he saw plaintiff walking east between the second and third tracks, and that when the cars, in motion, were about two car lengths away from plaintiff he “ hollered at him,” but plaintiff continued to walk east until he suddenly turned south across the track on which the cars were backing. The brakeman says he jumped from the car and signaled the engineer to stop, but plaintiff was struck by the northeast corner of the car. The train stopped within a car length. Defendant called' a witness who says he was on the tracks opposite the ferry landing “ guarding the crossing at the old ferry,” who testified that he saw plaintiff walking east along the tracks, that is, coming towards the witness, that the train was also backing down and that plaintiff turned across the tracks immediately in front of the train. Defendant called as a witness another brakeman who testified that he was on the car next the engine, that he heard Connelly holler ” to the plaintiff, that at the time the train was about fifty feet from plaintiff, 'but plaintiff walked on between the second and third tracks, say about fifteen feet, and then turned across the track. The- engineer on the locomotive which shoved the cars back says his attention was not called to plaintiff; he heard the rear brakeman shout and signal to stop, but did not see plaintiff until after he was struck.

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Related

Tapley v. . New York Dock Railway
138 N.E. 450 (New York Court of Appeals, 1922)
Tapley v. New York Dock Railway
199 A.D. 664 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
213 A.D. 247, 210 N.Y.S. 232, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osuldsen-v-delaware-lackawanna-western-railroad-nyappdiv-1925.