Pfeffer v. Buffalo Railway Co.

54 N.Y. St. Rep. 342
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJuly 14, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 342 (Pfeffer v. Buffalo Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pfeffer v. Buffalo Railway Co., 54 N.Y. St. Rep. 342 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

Hatch, J.

There is discovered in the record conflicting testimony, but not more so than is usually present in negligence cases, nor is it so serious in conflict as many cases of this character present. Taking the undisputed matters and the finding of the jury, the following facts must be deemed established: On Sunday morning, about nine o’clock, on August 30, 1891, plaintiff arrived at the corner of Balcom street and Harvard place, for the purpose of taking a Harvard place car, to be transported thereon to Buffalo park, where he was employed by a sewer contractor to watch tools. Hear Harvard place is situated defendant’s stables and storage sheds for its cars. The motive power upon defendant’s cars running out Harvard place at this time was electricity, applied, by means of the trolley system, to cars formerly propelled by horse power, and in no wise changed, except that the electrical machinery had been placed thereon ; but the cars themselves, in the structural part, for the carrying of passengers, remained unchanged, as did also the appliances for entering and alighting therefrom. Both the front and rear ends were open and unprotected by gates or other appliance, and presented the open ordinary step of a horse street car. On the morning in question, two cars propelled by electricity, supplied in each case by a motorman and a conductor, ran-from the storage shed onto the Main street track, and from there switched onto the Harvard place track. The surroundings were theseBetween the switch and the corner of Balcom street and Harvard place is a cross walk, nearly in front of “Sargent’s saloon,” so called, from forty to forty-five feet distant from the corner of Harvard place. Upon the last-named corner stands Stemler’s saloon, and across the street from that, on the northwesterly corner, is a greenhouse. The intervening space between Stemler’s saloon and the cross walk is a clear open place, with no obstruction to shut off the vision. Plaintiff established by five witnesses, including himself, [344]*344that he arrived at the corner about nine o’clock in the morning, and stopped in front of Stemler’s saloon to wait for the car; that the two cars came from the shed, and were switched onto the Harvard place track, and ran to the cross walk, where the first car stopped, the other car stopping about seven or eight feet in its rear; that the cars remained stationary three or four minutes at this point, and, while so standing, plaintiff walked from in front of Stemler’s saloon, across the open space, to the car, took hold of the iron in front of the dash hoard, on the front end of the car, placed one foot upon the first step, and, while drawing his body up, the motorman suddenly started the car, which gave a shock or jerk. Plaintiff was thrown off his balance, fell to the ground, and his legs coming between the front and rear wheels of the car, were run over by the latter, and were so injured that amputation of both feet became necessary. It was further shown, and, under instruction from the court, the jury have found, that the crosswalk where this car stopped was a place where the cars frequently stopped for the purpose of discharging and taking on passengers. The defendant gave evidence by three witnesses tending to establish that the car in question did not stop at the crosswalk on this morning, but continued in motion until after the happening of the accident; and by two witnesses, that plaintiff attempted to board the car while in motion, and, failing to secure a firm hold, was thrown under the car. As before observed, this evidence is conflicting, and the jury have negatived defendant’s contention. So far as plaintiff’s witnesses were concerned, there is little, if anything, beyond the testimony of defendant, above noted, which tends to discredit them. Three of them were former employes of defendant at the time of the accident, and two of them had voluntarily left its service after. Under what circumstances the third left the case does not disclose. All that appears is that at the trial he was not in the employ of defendant. The two witnesses first noted sat but a short distance from the place of accident, and in plain view of it. The third was the motorman of the hind car. He did not see plaintiff when approaching the car, but saw him as he was getting on; was positive the car was then stationary; saw it start; and saw plaintiff fall. The fourth witness stood in front of Stemler’s saloon, in plain view of the whole transaction. There was an attempt made to contradict the testimony of plaintiff’s witnesses, or some of them, by showing that defendant’s attorney, a short time after the accident, talked with them, and reduced their statements to writing, which were signed by them, in which they said the car was in motion when plaintiff attempted to board it * but the witness was unable to identify with certainty but one witness, Collins, who was defendant’s witness, while the written statement was not produced, and its absence was unaccounted for. There is, therefore, nothing which would justify the court in disregarding the testimony of these witnesses, or from which we can say that they are in any view discredited. Applying ordinary rules, there is a fair preponderance of testimony in favor of plaintiff’s theory.

[345]*345It is, however, claimed that the undisputed testimony fails to show that defendant was guilty of negligence. This claim is supported by the following suggestions: That the motorman was in his proper place, and that plaintiff gave him no sign that he desired to or contemplated taking the car; that the motorman did not in fact see plaintiff until he was in the act of falling, and that there was nothing in plaintiff’s actions prior thereto which conveyed or ought to have conveyed to the motorman’s sense that he was intending to take the car, and that as this place was not a regular stopping place for the car, and it was in fact a violation of the rules of the company to stop there, no obligation was,, therefore, imposed to look out for passengers at this place, which fact, as well as the fact that the corner where plaintiff first stood was not a regular stopping place, was, or at least ought to have-been, known to him; that the manner in which the car was-started was not shown to be negligent, or that it was done in an unusual or unskillful manner. The testimony showed that plaintiff walked from Stemler’s towards the car. The space was open. When he walked towards the car, he walked towards the motorman, and there was nothing requisite for the motorman to discover him other than to use his eyesight. Nothing distracted his attention. There was no need of a signal, as the car was stationary, and it does not appear that the motorman was making any move to start it. When plaintiff reached the car, it was motionless ; and when he took hold of the rail of the car, and stepped upon the step, he was brought to within two or three feet of the-motorman. All of these circumstances were before the jury, and upon them the court submitted the question to the jury, did the motorman see the plaintiff, or, if not, ought he, in the proper discharge of his duties, to have seen him, and known of his attempt to board the car ? It needs no argument to prove that these circumstances authorized the jury to draw the inference that a proper discharge of duty would have apprised the motorman of plaintiff’s presence and desire to take the car before it was started. The next suggestion is not supported by the testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.Y. St. Rep. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pfeffer-v-buffalo-railway-co-nysuperctnyc-1893.