Smith v. New York & Harlem Railroad

6 Duer 225
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedDecember 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 Duer 225 (Smith v. New York & Harlem 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
Smith v. New York & Harlem Railroad, 6 Duer 225 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1856).

Opinion

By the Court. Slosson, J.

The action is brought by the - widow, as administratrix of Timothy St. John Smith, an engineer in the employ of the Hew York and Hew Haven R. R. Co., to recover, under the statute, damages to the widow and two infant children, occasioned by his death, in consequence of the alleged. negligence of the defendants in not providing a proper switch at a point of their road at the Melrose station, in Westchester "county, between Hew York city and Williams’ Bridge, the road between which points was used by the Hew Haven Co. for the running of theip cars with the consent of the defendants, and for a compensation paid by the latter company to the defendants; and the plaintiff alleges, that on the 9th of October, 1854, a locomotive with passenger train, under the management and guidance of the deceased, as engineer as aforesaid, was thrown from the track at Melrose aforesaid, and the said Smith was killed; the cause of the catastrophe being that the defendants “ carelessly, negligently, and _ [227]*227improperly suffered and permitted a switch of an insufficient, unfit, and improper character and construction to be used at that place, and by their negligence, unskilfulness, want of care, etc., through their servants in that behalf, so carelessly, negligently, and wrongfully placed and turned the said switch, and left the same so carelessly, etc., turned, and made their signal of safety so carelessly,” etc., that the train was thrown from the track, and the engineer killed.

The defendants deny the unfitness of the switch, and allege that tjie engine was thrown from the track “ in consequence of the accidental misplacement of a switch by a switchman employed by the defendants, and the carelessness and negligence of the deceased,” but they aver, “that the said switchman was a suitable and proper person to be employed by the defendants, and had always maintained, until the accident, the reputation of a sober, honest, and capable person for such an employment,” And they further allege, that the deceased entered upon and continued in his said employment “with full knowledge of the construction of the road, and the mode and manner in which the switches and turn-outs upon the road were conducted and managed, and that he took the risk of his employment, and of the character and capacity of the various persons employed thereon,” and they deny negligence on their part.

The evidence as to the good character and qualifications of ¡Lawless, the switch-tender, was uncontradicted.

The switch was out of place; in respect to this there is no dispute. As the trffifi approached, the white flag, signal of safety, was held out by the switch-tender, and one witness says he saw it a quarter of a mile off. The witnesses differ as to the rate of speed at which -the train was moving, varying in their estimates from twelve to eighteen and twenty miles ar£ hour.

The men employed on the road between the city and Williams’ Bridge, are all employed by the defendants, the Harlem Company.

There were six switches at this station, three long and three short. The question as to the sufficiency of the switch in question, which was a short switch, turns on the point, whether it is or not inferior to what is called the “ frog and' guard rail.” On this subject the evidence on the part of the plaintiff is very conclusive.

[228]*228Schuyler, a railroad engineer, swears that the frog and guard rail require no switchman, and that the shut switch is not now used to his knowledge, in consequence of the superiority of the frog and guard, though he does not mean to say they are not used on any road, as he has seen them in various places.

He says the frog and guard rail is superior to the shut switch, and is uniformly deemed better by engineers, but he says there is no difficulty in the shut switch, if it is in its proper place.

Sanborn, the conductor, who had been five years on railroads, swears that shut switches ai’e not as safe as frog and guard rails; the weight of the engine is calculated to displace a shut switch. He says that if this had been a frog and guard rail they would have gone safe. He says that the shut switch is not used on the Erie road, and the Eastern roads, but the frog and guard.

Mather, a civil engineer, says the best method of construction is to use the frog and guard rail, and it is always used now; and he says the advantage it has is this, it is a fixture, and always right, whereas the shut switch is movable and liable to be out of place. The frog and guard, he says, are altogether safer than the switch, and the latter is not now used on any railroad that he knows of except one in South Carolina. Most railroads, he says, have changed from the shut switch to the frog and guard rail, “ The frog and guard rail are now universally used as far as I know.”

One witness swears that the switches at that station were in a very bad -condition, while the witnesses for the defence swear that they were all in good condition.

On the part of the defence, one witness swears that if he was riding over the road, and was sure it was in its place, he would prefer the shut switch. Another swears this was as good a switch as any of its kind could be.

One witness swears that he should not think the frog and guard rail were used because they are safe; he says that in,the course of time they are cheaper, because the shut switch requires a man to be in constant attendance. It thus appears that the difference between the two is, that the frog and guard rail is always in its place, and requires no switch-man to attend it, while the shut switch absolutely requires the attendance of a switch-man in order to safely.

[229]*229When the plaintiff rested, the defendants moved for a dismissal of the complaint, on the ground that the accident was occasioned by the negligence of a fellow-servant engaged in the .same business, and was one of the risks assumed by the deceased by virtue of his employment. The motion was denied, and the defendants excepted.

The Judge charged that defendants were liable for the carelessness of the switch-tender employed by them, supposing no negligence on the part of the deceased, notwithstanding he was an employee of the New Haven Company; and to this there was an exception. He also charged that it was negligence on the part of the defendants not to adopt a useful improvement in the construction of the switch, by which improvement the danger of accident would be materially reduced, if the improvement was known to them, and they had it in their power to apply it; and for which negligence they would be liable, provided the accident was caused by such omission on their part, the deceased himself not being guilty of negligence. The proposition was stated with this qualification, however, to wit., that the improvement had been proved,- and found to be valuable as a means of promoting safety, and was known to the defendants, and was within their power so as to be reasonably practicable. To this charge, also, the defendants excepted.

Two questions were then left to the jury.

1. Whether the death was caused by the negligence of the switch-tender, without any negligence on the part of the deceased concurring to cause the result?

2. Whether negligence, on the part of the defendants, in not providing a proper switch also caused the accident, without any negligence on the part of the deceased ?

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Related

Sullivan v. Tioga Railroad
51 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 304 (New York Supreme Court, 1887)
McMahon v. Davidson
12 Minn. 357 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1867)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Duer 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-new-york-harlem-railroad-nysuperctnyc-1856.