Walsh v. Fitchburg Railroad

39 N.E. 1068, 145 N.Y. 301, 64 N.Y. St. Rep. 711, 100 Sickels 301, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 814
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 12, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by117 cases

This text of 39 N.E. 1068 (Walsh v. Fitchburg Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walsh v. Fitchburg Railroad, 39 N.E. 1068, 145 N.Y. 301, 64 N.Y. St. Rep. 711, 100 Sickels 301, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 814 (N.Y. 1895).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

The defendant owned a plot of ground in the northern portion of the city of Troy, bounded by four different streets. Quite a large portion of its land was unfenced and the public had for a number of years been accustomed to walk across this plot for the purpose of shortening the distance, instead of going around by the public streets. The land was approached from the north on the same grade as the public street and the defendant laid its tracks through the street and on to the plot for the purpose of using it in the ordinary transaction of its business. It was not used for the purpose of a depot and the land itself was rough, uneven, overgrown with weeds and grass and not fit for use by horses and wagons and was not so used. The public were not invited upon the land in any sense further than that the defendant had not taken occasion to prevent the public from using a portion of it as a footpath for the purpose already stated. The footpath thus marked out by use ran within fifteen or twenty feet of the turntable of the defendant, which was used by it in the ordinary course of its business. The surface of the table was in some places about three feet above the grade of the plot and at others it was eight or nine feet above grade. The only way to approach it on the level was by the use of the tracks of the defendant which led on to the table and it was used for the purpose of taking the defendant’s engines and turning them around. The turntable was built in the usual manner and was in perfect repair. The main tracks of the defendant ran through the eastern portion of the plot. The turntable was west of the main tracks.

*305 On the 31st of August, 1888, the plaintiff, who was at that time a child of the age of five years and nine months, had comex upon the defendant’s premises, and, in company with several other and older boys, was playing on the turntable, and, in the course of turning the table around, the plaintiff had his leg caught between the rail on the table and the rail on the adjoining earth and he was severely injured. This action has been brought for the purpose of recovering damages for those injuries, and a recovery has been had which has been sustained by the General Term.

Plaintiff bases his right to maintain this action upon the allegation that the defendant, by permitting the public to go upon its land in the manner stated, had in effect invited such entrance, and was bound on that account to use greater care to prevent an accident of this nature.

A further ground is stated that, in using the turntable, even upon its own property, under circumstances which rendered it probable that children would come upon the land and play upon the turntable, it was bound to the exercise of greater care than it had observed; that it was bound to guard the table in such a way that children could not come upon it, or to station a man there to prevent their entrance, or else the defendant should have • used some kind of a device which would or might prevent the turning of the table while it was not in use by defendant. The defendant contends that the plaintiff had not been invited to come upon its grounds, either expressly or by any implication arising from its conduct in simply permitting the public to cross a portion of its grounds as a short cut between two streets, and that it was not bound to any active vigilance in the matter, and was only bound to such reasonable care and caution as any one ought to take to prevent injury to another, and that, guided by that rule, it had not, as matter of law, been guilty of any negligence.

As to the assumed invitation held out to the public, there is nothing- in the facts found in this record which justifies any such assumption. The plaintiff was not on the land by invitation of the defendant nor in its business, but for his own pur *306 poses totally disconnected with the defendant’s business. He was not a trespasser in the sense of his being unlawfully upon the premises, because the defendant, by its "course of conduct, had impliedly granted a license to the public to use the land for the purpose above mentioned. This license, of course, could at any time have been revoked, and then any one going upon the land would have been a trespasser. But under the circumstances, treating the plaintiff as an adult, and simply upon the question of the invitation held out to him, he was there by sufferance only. The defendant had no right intentionally to injure him, and it would be liable if it heedlessly or carelessly injured him while performing its own business. It owed him a duty to abstain from injuring him either intentionally or by failing to exercise reasonable care, but it did not owe him the duty of active vigilance to see that he was not injured while upon its land merely by permission for his own convenience. (Nicholson v. Erie R’way Co., 41 N. Y. 525; Byrne v. Railroad Co., 104 id. 363; Splittorf v. State of New York, 108 id. 205; Cusick v. Adams, 115 id. 55.) We think there is no proof whatever that the defendant, so far as its duty to plaintiff is concerned, failed to exercise reasonable care in the conduct of its business with regard to this machine.

We are of the opinion that the defendant has not been shown guilty of a violation of its duty, nor has a question been made for the jury in that respect by proof that it used the turntable in the manner it did. It is true that some means might have been adopted which possibly might have prevented the happening of this accident. The proof is that turntables are not generally constructed with bolts for the purpose of keeping them steady. Such bolts do not come with the table from the factory. Nothing of that kind is essential to the machine or for its legitimate and proper use. The table might have been kept so fastened or locked when not in use that people could not turn it without unfastening or unlocking it, and the defendant might even have built a wall around it so high and guarded it so closely as to prevent any access to it *307 by children at any time. But was defendant bound to do so ? Did it owe any such duty to the public or to this plaintiff ? The turntable was on its own land; it was used by the defendant for the sole purpose of properly conducting its own business ; it was a fit and proper machine for that purpose; it was not of the nature of a trap for the unwary; it was not built in any improper or negligent way with reference to the transaction of the business of the defendant. What further duty did it owe to those who had no business upon its land, who came there unasked and whose presence was simply tolerated ?

Upon the question of alluring plaintiff, we do not think it can be correctly said defendant either enticed or allured him to come upon its land.

The whole case in this aspect rests upon the doctrine that the turntable was, as to children of tender years, a dangerous and at the same time an enticing machine, one which, when seen, would inevitably and infallibly allure children to come upon it for the purpose of playing upon it, and that the natural and probable result of such play would be the injury of the child.

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.E. 1068, 145 N.Y. 301, 64 N.Y. St. Rep. 711, 100 Sickels 301, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-fitchburg-railroad-ny-1895.