Walter v. Meader

77 N.Y.S. 407

This text of 77 N.Y.S. 407 (Walter v. Meader) 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
Walter v. Meader, 77 N.Y.S. 407 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

KELLOGG, J.

I think it is unnecessary in this case to determine whether defendant owed to plaintiffs' a duty which the village of Oneida did not owe in respect to the maintenance of an efficient fire department, water supply, and apparatus for the extinguishing of fires. If it were conceded that defendant was not merely a servant of the. municipality, but was a public officer charged with a duty towards the owners of property in the village, and as such liable to each owner in an action for negligence in the discharge of that duty, still the proofs in this case fall far short of establishing any actionable neglect, or damage resulting from such neglect. The plaintiff failed to prove any facts which would authorize a jury to conclude that, had the defendant used the utmost diligence, and arrived, with such apparatus as the village had provided, at the scene of the fire, within a reasonable time after notice, his presence with such fire apparatus would have been of any avail. It was not proven that there were any hydrants or water mains in that vicinity, or any water supply which the fire apparatus was adapted to use. It was proven that there was near this house a well of water, but no bucket or chain or rope; that there was a creek, with water in it, some 200 feet away, but no pails or buckets to carry the water in. It is not to be presumed that pails and buckets are the usual apparatus of a fire department, or that defendant was in possession of any such crude means of extinguishing fires. The case is left without facts upon which an intelligent judgment could have .been formed as to .possibility or probability of saving any portion of the house, had the engineer reached the scene of the fire within a reasonable time- after notice. As a part of plaintiffs’ proof, the learned attorney for plaintiffs introduced in evidence the verified answer of the defendant. This answer contains many statements of facts which are not controverted or disputed by any other testimony in the case, and, being offered by plaintiffs as proof to establish their case, must be taken as true, when not otherwise contro- • verted. These established facts negative all presumptions of negligence, and all presumptions of ability to extinguish the fire had the engineer used all diligence possible in reaching the scene of the fire.

The judgment should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.Y.S. 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walter-v-meader-nyappdiv-1902.