Pollard v. New York & New Haven Railroad

7 Bosw. 437
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedDecember 29, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Bosw. 437 (Pollard v. New York & New Haven Railroad) 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
Pollard v. New York & New Haven Railroad, 7 Bosw. 437 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1860).

Opinion

By the Court. Bosworth, Ch. J.

—No motion was made for a new trial, on the ground that the verdict is against evidence.

There is no ground for doubting that while the plaintiff was standing in one of the defendants’ cars, another of defendants’ cars was driven or propelled against it so violently that the plaintiff, by reason of such collision of the two cars, was thrown down and injured. He swears to this general fact. Sesson corroborates it. Halliday corroborates the testimony of the plaintiff as to the fact of the colliding car rebounding, or having a backward motion given to it by reason of the violent or forcible contact, of that car with the one in which the plaintiff was. If, then, the plaintiff was free from any negligence contributing to his injury, and was injured by the violent manner in which the two cars came in contact, and if this violent contact resulted from the negligence of the defendants, the plaintiff’s right to recover would seem to be clear.

The charge itself was not excepted to. And, unless some instruction which the defendants requested should be given to the jury, was erroneously refused, no error was committed which can be reviewed on an appeal from the judgment alone.

What is the theory on which the defendants’ first request seems to have been made? The plaintiff had testified' “ that the accident was occasioned by another car colliding against the car in which he was, with great violence,” * * * whereby “ he was suddenly flung headlong through the car; * * *. he was thrown from the rear door of the car to the stove, which was in the middle.”

The defendants then “ gave evidence tending to show, from experience, and by the laws of motion, that the plaintiff could not have been thrown forward, and injured in the manner he claims to have been, by a c.ar being propelled against the rear of the car in which he was standing.”

The defendants then made their request for an instruc[442]*442tion to the jury, “that if they believed from the evidence that the injury to the plaintiff was not caused by the car which was coming up being propelled against the car in which he was standing, as testified by him, then he is not entitled to recover.”

■ This request seems to be made upon the theory that if the evidence satisfied the jury that the colliding car, by being propelled against that in which the plaintiff ' stood, did not throw the plaintiff from the rear of the car forward, then he could not recover. That inasmuch as he had testified that effect upon himself, to have been caused by such a colliding of another car with the rear part of the one in which he stood; and as this effect (as the defendants insisted) could not be produced by such a cause, then the cause ^of the injury was unproved, and there could be no recovery.

In answer to this view of the case, it may be urged that, although the evidence of the defendants, “ from experience,” and relating “to the laws of motion,” tended to show that a car, by being propelled violently against the rear car in which the plaintiff stood, would not throw him forward and injure him, yet the plaintiff had sworn that he was so injured; and a passenger in the same car testified to the same fact; and that the persons seated in the same car “were pitched forward.”

There was evidence, then, on the part of the plaintiff that he was thrown forward and injured, and that persons seated in the same car were pitched forward.

On this evidence, their being nothing to impeach the integrity of the plaintiff ’s witnesses, or the accuracy of their testimony, except so far as it was affected by the defendants’ evidence, “from experience,” and in relation to “ the laws of motion,” the judge told the jury “ that if they believed it to be impossible, from the, evidence, that the injury to Pollard could have been occasioned in the manner stated by him, then he could not recover.”

If it could so occur, it is quite clear that there was no evidence (which is contained in' the case) tending to show [443]*443it did not so occur, except that given by the defendants tending to show it was impossible that it could have so occurred.

By the charge as made, the question first presented to the mind of the jury was, could the injury have so occurred ?

In this connection the judge further charged, “ That if the injury in fact occurred as stated by Pollard, the company would be liable, unless the jury believed that his negligence contributed to the injury; that in order to recover, he must prove against the company the negligence alleged.” * * “ That it was not necessary, to entitle the plaintiff to recover, that the injury should have occurred precisely as he alleged in his testimony, if the jury believed, from the evidence, that it happened without any default on his part, and from negligence on the part of the company.”

We understand the sentence last quoted, as an instruction , that although the jury may believe that the first and natural effect of propelling a car violently against the rear of that in which the plaintiff stood, would be to give him a backward instead of a forward motion, yet if they believe the actual effect of the collision was to throw him forward and injure him without fault on his part, the plaintiff was entitled to recover.

We think it was not, and could not have been understood by the jury as an instruction that they might find for the plaintiff, on the theory that his injury may have been produced by some other negligence of the defendants’ than their negligently and violently propelling a car against the rear of that in which the plaintiff stood.

" No cause of injury was suggested or could have been considered by the jury, except the negligent and forcible concussion of the two cars belonging to the defendants.

In this view of the charge, it means, and we think must have been understood to mean, that in order to find for the plaintiff, they must be satisfied by the evidence that the plaintiff, without fault or negligence on his part, was thrown down and injured by the defendants’ negligently [444]*444and forcibly propelling one of their cars against the rear of that in which the plaintiff was standing. And if satisfied that he was so injured, he could recover, notwithstanding the first motion given to his person by the collision may have been backward instead of forward.

In this connection it may not be immaterial to notice that the case states that “ evidence was given on both sides as to the manner of driving up the car or coupling or attaching it to the other, as bearing on the fact of the injury, and the question of defendants’ negligence.”

What this evidence was, or what it justly tended to prove, is not stated in the case.

It may have been sufficient of itself to warrant the charge as made, and to uphold the verdict of the jury.

In any view of the case, the defendants were not entitled to an instruction in the terms of the first request, unaccompanied by the other views submitted to the jury in connection with it. The charge as made, submitted that proposition to the jury, with the qualifications or explanations accmpanying it, and the defendants are not entitled to a new trial by reason of the refusal of the judge to submit the case to the jury in the precise form asked for by the first request to charge.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Bosw. 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollard-v-new-york-new-haven-railroad-nysuperctnyc-1860.