Van Brunt v. New York Telephone Co.

209 A.D. 4, 204 N.Y.S. 361, 1924 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8537
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 17, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 209 A.D. 4 (Van Brunt v. New York Telephone Co.) 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
Van Brunt v. New York Telephone Co., 209 A.D. 4, 204 N.Y.S. 361, 1924 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8537 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Kelly, P. J.:

At the close of the plaintiff’s case in chief the defendant moved to dismiss the complaint without stating the grounds for the motion, and the learned trial justice said, “ I think there is a question of credibility I must submit to the jury.” The defendant excepted. Defendant then proceeded to call one witness as to the facts of the accident, viz., the driver of defendant’s automobile which struck plaintiff. Defendant’s witness Nordstrom did not see the accident, but he testified that defendant’s driver sounded his horn just as he passed the witness, “ about a minute ” before the collision with plaintiff, about fifty feet.” Anderson, the chauffeur, and the plaintiff and his witness Elliott say the horn sounded when the automobile was about twenty-five feet from the plaintiff.

I do not think it makes much difference whether it was twenty-five feet or fifty feet. The automobile was traveling at ten miles [5]*5an hour according to the chauffeur, and at that rate of speed it would cover twenty-five feet or even fifty feet in a second or two. Certainly the horn was not sounded a minute before the crash.

At the close of the case defendant moved to dismiss on the ground that plaintiff had failed to show negligence and because the evidence affirmatively showed contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff. The court reserved decision and submitted the question of negligence and contributory negligence to the jury in a charge to which defendant took no exception. The jury found a verdict for plaintiff for $750, and on the coming in of the verdict the learned justice set it aside and granted the motion to dismiss the complaint.

Assuming that the learned justice had power to reserve decision and take the verdict of the jury (Bail v. N. Y., N. H. & H. R. R. Co., 201 N. Y. 355), it is not a question of the verdict being against the evidence but a legal proposition whether plaintiff made out a case for the jury.

I am of opinion that the plaintiff presented a case for the jury both as to negligence on the part of defendant’s chauffeur and as to contributory negligence. I think the judgment should be reversed on the law and the verdict reinstated.

The following facts appear in the evidence: New York avenue runs north and south at Huntington. It is the old highway leading from the main street in the village south to the railroad station, and thence south across the island. The accident which is the subject of this action occurred on November 16, 1920, about five o’clock p. m., near the Huntington station where New York avenue runs under the Long Island railroad tracks which run east and west. It was dark like,” as it might well be at that time of day in November.

There was an electric arc light in the vicinity, which “ practically.” lighted up the road. It was said that it was a very stormy ” night, had been or was raining. After the accident plaintiff was lying with his head and part of his body on the edge of the macadam strip in the middle of the road and the rest of his body in the mud puddle.” At the place where the accident happened there is a macadam strip in the center of New York avenue twenty-three feet wide, and on either side of the macadam strip there is a dirt road four or six feet in width.

The plaintiff, sixty-three years of age, had finished his day’s work and was on his way home. He was walking south, on the dirt strip on the right side of the road as he was going, which was the west side of the road. There is no sidewalk, nor is it disputed [6]*6that he was walking where pedestrians necessarily and usually walked. Plaintiff' says he was walking “ pretty close to the sidewalk, as close as I could where there was a sidewalk.” He heard a “ noise ”— he heard one horn ” from back of him “ maybe twenty-five feet away. * * * Q. When you heard this horn did you look back? A. Well, I was walking and happened to look just that way. Q. Did you see any automobile when you looked back that way twenty-five feet before you were struck? * * * [This is the learned counsel's statement; the plaintiff did not say that he looked back twenty-five feet before he was struck.] A. Yes, I did see an automobile.”

He said in answer to the court that the automobile was on the macadam strip. Evidently he was at once struck by the automobile and rendered unconscious. The defendant's chauffeur, Anderson, testified that he was traveling at the rate of ten miles an hour. He says he saw plaintiff about twenty-five feet ahead of him “ and as 1 saw him I blew my horn, and I kept right on going about, as I say, ten miles an hour, I should say.”

Of course at ten miles an hour, a mile every six minutes, he traveled the twenty-five feet in less than two seconds.

Plaintiff’s witness Elliott was about twenty feet from the point of the accident. He saw plaintiff walking south on New York avenue about three ■ feet from the west edge * * *. It is a dirt path.” Elliott saw the automobile also traveling south coming behind the plaintiff. The automobile was on the macadamized part of the road. He says the automobile was on the right-hand side of the macadam strip on the edge of the dirt path. The chauffeur had at least twenty-three feet of macadam on which to operate his car. Elliott testifies: Q. Will you tell us what you saw and what happened? A. Well, as his machine was coming up, as he got close upon this man, this man, it seemed, stepped from the left. Seemed to look— The Court: Looked where? Mr. Dreyer: I move to strike that out, if your Honor please. I just want him to describe what the man did. By Mr. Dreyer: Q. Stand up, Mr. Elliott, and just show what Mr. Van Brunt did. Turn in the direction he was walking. A. He was walking this way (illustrating). He stepped out and looked. By the Court: Q. He looked back? A. He looked back, yes. I don’t know- what his intentions were. Q. Never mind. He looked back? A. Yes. Q. Then what did you do? A. After he looked back he had been struck. Q. What? A. The machine had hit him. Q. He was walking on the dirt, you say? Was he on the dirt when he looked back, on the dirt road? A. I couldn't be looking at all things at once. Q. No, but when you looked back, you [7]*7saw him? A. I was not looking just exactly where he was. I know he was walking up on his right-hand side. Q. Was he on the dirt or on the macadam? A. He was right at the edge, I know.”

The witness says plaintiff was struck by the right front mudguard of the automobile. The machine turned to the left, as the witness supposed, to avoid running over plaintiff, and then ran fifteen feet, turning in off the macadam to the right hand or west side of the road. The witness says the automobile did not slow up before striking plaintiff.

The plaintiff was badly injured. He was unconscious and was taken to the Huntington Hospital, where it was ascertained that his skull was fractured. He remained there ten days.

The learned trial justice having.reserved decision on a motion for nonsuit, in his charge to which defendant took no exception, submitted the question of defendant’s negligence and plaintiff’s contributory negligence to the jury. They found a verdict for plaintiff for $750, which, of course, was a very moderate verdict, but plaintiff, sixty-three years old, a laborer driving a coal or feed wagon in Huntington, is apparently willing to take it.

On the coming in of the verdict, the trial justice set it aside and granted the motion to dismiss the action.

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Bluebook (online)
209 A.D. 4, 204 N.Y.S. 361, 1924 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-brunt-v-new-york-telephone-co-nyappdiv-1924.