Quinn v. Brooklyn Heights Railroad

91 A.D. 489, 86 N.Y.S. 883
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 91 A.D. 489 (Quinn v. Brooklyn Heights 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
Quinn v. Brooklyn Heights Railroad, 91 A.D. 489, 86 N.Y.S. 883 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

The plaintiff in this action was seriously injured in his foot, warranting, it is claimed, amputation, while engaged in repairing cars for the defendant at its Flatbush avenue depot, in the borough of Brooklyn, on the 14th day of February, 1901. There is no substantial dispute about the accident, the principal questions relating ■to the defendant’s liability for the damages resulting from the accident under the admitted circumstances. It appears that a car standing in the depot, about 300 feet from Flatbush avenue, required what is known as a repair piece, which seems to be a loop of iron adjusted over a wheel for the purpose of preventing the trucks getting out of place, and the plaintiff was directed to attend to this work. He says that he went to the car, which was in the repair shop, at about half-past eleven o’clock in the morning, took the trolley pole off the wÍ2-e, so that he would not receive a shock in the ■event of a wire becoming grounded, and began W02’lc. At noon he went to luncheon, and on returning to the shop he noticed that the t2’olley pole was still fi’ee from the wire. He afterward went to look afte2‘ something necessa2y to the work, and resumed his task at the side of the car. In adjusting the repair piece lie had to use an iron bar as a lever to spi'ing the iron into place, and he was down on the floor at the side of the car, with one of his feet just in front of the forward wheel of the rear truck of the car. While in this position, and without any warning, the motorman, acting under the direction of the starte2-, suddenly moved the caí-, the wheels of the rear truck passing over the plaintiff’s foot, producing the injuries mentioned above. Upon the trial the juiy brought in a verdict for -$8,000, and from the judgment entered the defendant appeals, as well as fi’om the order denying a motion for a new trial.

The negligence of the defendant was predicated upon the absence of rules intended to protect the plaintiff while engaged in this work, [492]*492ór a failure on the part of the defendant and its servants to give any warning of an intention to move this car. The plaintiff put in evidence the printed rules of the defendant in reference to the operation of its cars, etc., but there is no provision covering the conduct of car repairers contained in these rules. The defendant,, however, introduced evidence intended to establish that its foreman had adopted rules from time to time, which he had recorded in a book which he kept in his office, and which he claimed had been signed by the plaintiff, in which rules were laid down in reference-to car repairers. The original book in which these rules' were alleged to have been written was not produced, and there was -some evidence that there had been a fire in the depot just prior to the accident, and that the witness had not seen this book since the fire, and upon this basis secondary evidence of the contents of the book was permitted. The plaintiff testified positively that he had never seen such a book and that he had never signed any such rnle,^and although he had worked at this depot for a number of years, he testified positively that he had never seen the out of order ” signs which it is claimed were required by the rules to be displayed upon cars undergoing repairs, and he was corroborated upon this point by one witness who had worked in the same place for a long time. An offer of a book conceded to have been prepared since the accident, and which was admitted to contain matters not in the original book, but which was claimed to be similar to the one which was alleged té have been in- existence before the fire, was rejected, and this is one of the grounds now urged for reversal. It is true that there were more witnesses who testified to the existence of the book than there were who denied it, but upon the question of this book ever having been brought to the notice of the plaintiff, and of his having signed the same, defendant’s shop foreman testified in the affirmative and the plaintiff in the negative, and the jury had a clear right to determine which of these men told the truth, and their verdict cannot be said to have been against the weight of evidence. Certainly rules which exist only in a book kept in the office of a shop foreman cannot be said to be controlling upon a man who has never seen or heard of them, and when the plaintiff had. established that the printed rules of the company made no provision looking to his. safety, he had shown facts which entitled him to go to the jury upon. [493]*493the question whether the defendant had exercised reasonable care to provide him a reasonably safe place,, and reasonable protection in the performance of obviously dangerous work. .If there were any rules which had come to the notice of the plaintiff, and he had disregarded these rules, he could not recover; but it was clearly incumbent upon the defendant to show that these special' rules, which the foreman appears to have changed at intervals as caprice or judgment •dictated,, and which were not accessible to all of the employees, as by posting or publication, were brought to the knowledge of the plaintiff, in order to defeat his recovery, if the jury should determine that the defendant had failed in the discharge of its duty to the plaintiff by not giving him proper general rules or special warning of an intention to move this car. We are of opinion that the plaintiff’s evidence presented a question of fact for the jury, and that the verdict is not against the weight of evidence.

We are equally clear that the evidence disclosed facts which justified the jury in drawing the inference that the plaintiff was free from negligence contributing to the accident. It is not the duty of a plaintiff, more than that of the defendant, to take such extraordinary precautions that an accident cannot possibly happen ; he is called upon only to exercise reasonable care to protect himself .against dangers that are likely to occur in his occupation. The ■evidence shows that the plaintiff had removed the trolley pole from the wire at the time of going to work; that he had observed that it was still off when he came back from luncheon, and the fact that he did not look again after going a short distance for a piece of material does not constitute negligence as a matter of law. It was for the jury to say what a reasonably prudent man would or should have done under the circumstances; and as the evidence is undisputed that the car was started by the motor man, the inference follows necessarily that the question of the trolley being on at the exact moment of his going to work was of no importance, even if it was ■on, for the car, so far as appears, did not start until it was put in motion by the act of the motorman in the ordinary operation of the car.

In this view of the case we have only to examine the exceptions. The appellant urges that the court erred in submitting to the jury that the defendant was liable for the negligence of the foreman [494]*494in instructing the motorman to take the car out. This being a-detail of the work, and the foreman being a competent man, it. could not be negligence on tlié part of the defendant.” In the first.place, the charge does not bear the construction which the appellant, has placed upon it, and the so-called foreman was not a foreman -at: all, but a starter. He was the train dispatcher of the defendant’s, railroad, and was discharging a duty which belonged to the master.. It is the duty of the master to furnish cars which are in proper condition, not alone for. the passengers, but for their, employees. This-, necessarily involves the duty of selecting the cars to be used, and.

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Bluebook (online)
91 A.D. 489, 86 N.Y.S. 883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quinn-v-brooklyn-heights-railroad-nyappdiv-1904.