Weitzman v. Nassau Electric Railroad

33 A.D. 585
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 33 A.D. 585 (Weitzman v. Nassau Electric 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
Weitzman v. Nassau Electric Railroad, 33 A.D. 585 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Woodward, J. :

Harry Weitzman, plaintiff’s intestate, was, on the evening of the 9th day of May, 1897, upon Rockaway avenue, in the city of Brooklyn. He was at that time about five years of age, and was in the act of passing from a candy store at Ho. 386 to his home on the opposite side of the street, where his. sister, a young woman of - twenty-four, awaited him upon the veranda. He was' about seventy-five feet from the corner of Glenmore avenue, and the car of the defendant, at the time the child left the sidewalk to pass over the street, was at this corner. ' The distance from the curb line to the first track of the car line of the defendant is approximately ten feet, so that the child traveled ten feet while the car with which he collided was passing over the seventy-five feet of space. When.the child reached the track, and after he had passed over the first rail, 'he'was struck by the fender of the defendant’s car. The child, as ■ the evidence of the witnesses show, was landed upon the fender, and in this position was carried a distance of from thirty-two to one hundred and fifty feet, although the defendant’s motorman testifies that he saw the child twenty feet before he struck him,, so that the car, conceding the estimates made by the. defendant’s own witnesses, must have run at least fifty-two feet after the motorman saw the plaintiff’s intestate-in a position of danger. The defendant’s motorman testified that, with the car traveling at the rate it was then , going, loaded as it was, it could have been stopped in forty-five feet. The trial court refused ' to allow the plaintiff to show by an expert motorman that the car, if equipped with the appliances commonly in use, could have been stopped within a space of twenty feet. While it is not necessary, in [587]*587view of the conclusion which we have reached upon other points raised by the appellant in this case, it may not be out of place to state that this ruling is not in harmony with the authorities in this State. “ It is,” say the court in the case of Costello v. The Syracuse, Binghamton & New York Railroad Co. (65. Barb. 92), “ the duty of railroad companies to use, upon their trains, all improvements in machinery, or in construction of cars, &c., commonly used by other companies, and it is negligence if they do not use them, for which they are liable to a person injured, if the improvement would, in any appreciable degree, have contributed to prevent the injury. * * * We .must assume that the plaintiff, if permitted to give the proof, would have shown that if the patent brake had been used, the train could have been stopped within the shortest distance,” etc. The railroad company owing the duty to the plaintiff’s intestate, and to the public, to have its cars equipped with the best appliances, it was competent for the plaintiff’s witness to testify as to the distance within which a car properly equipped might have been stopped. An appeal was taken in the case above cited, but was dismissed without an opinion. (55 N. Y. 641.) “It has been held,” say the court in.the case of Smith v. New York & Harlem R. R. Co. (19 N. Y. 127), “that railroad companies are bound to avail themselves of all new inventions and improvements known to them, which will cqntribute materially to the safety of their passengers, whenever the utility of such improvement has been thoroughly tested and demonstrated. * * * Undoubtedly this rule is to be applied with a reasonable regard to the ability of the company, and the nature and cost of such improvements, but within its appropriate limits it is a rule of great importance, and one which should be strictly enforced.” This rule, in effect limiting the. duty of the railroad to the passenger, was considered in the Costello Case (supra), and the court say: “ Railroad companies are undoubtedly bound to supply their trains with brakes, and if a person is injured on or crossing the track, and the injury could have been avoided by the use of brakes, the omission to have them, or to use them, would be such. negligence as would render them liable to the person injured. If they are obliged to have some brake, the public safety requires that it should be the best in use. They cannot use an old brake which will not stop a train in less than 1,000 feet, when running [588]*588■ten miles per hour, when other companies use brakes that will stop •a train in 500 feet, moving at the same rate of speed. A company is as much bound to prevent doing injury to a person on its track, by using all the facilities that experience has provided for the purpose, as the person on the track is bound to use all the means in his power to escape the injury, when he is aware that it is impending.” In the case at bar the. offer was to prove that the car might have been stopped by the defendant in time to have avoided the collision. It was shown that the witness was an expert motorman with a large experience; that he was familiar w'itli the leading systems generally in use in the equipment of electric railroads, and that he was an electrician, and it seems to us that the mere fact that he had not made an examination of the particular apparatus in use by the dófendant, did not disqualify him from testifying as to the distance • within which a car properly equipped might have been stopped. If the car of the defendant, properly equipped, could have been stopped in time to have prevented the accident, after the motorman saw the child approaching the track, the jury were authorized to find that it was negligence on the part of.the defendant to have permitted the collision, notwithstanding the negligence of the child in getting into a position of danger, and it was competent for the plaintiff to show by .this witness that the car, if properly equipped, might have been stopped within the twenty feet after the motorman testifies that he saw, the child approaching. “ It is the duty of the carrier,” say the court in the case of Curtis v. The Rochester & Syracuse Railroad Compamy (18 N. Y. 534), “ to provide perfect machinery, and if he has failed in this, it devolves upon him to show the excuse, if any,” and this is, in our opinion, the view which the trial court should have taken of the evidence offered by the plaintiff. He had a right to show that a car, equipped with proper machinery, and such as was in common use, might have been stopped in time to* have prevented the original contact with the child, and it would then have remained for the defendant to .have shown that the car which it.was operating was properly equipped. In the case of Hegeman v. The Western R. R. Corporation (13 N. Y. 9) it was held that: The evidence of the utility and use of -the safety beam was ■ properly admitted. It had been used in New Jersey eleven years before this accident, and upon some of the Albany and Buffalo [589]*589roads, from the latter part of the year 1846, and in 1851 was introduced upon the road of the defendant. Whether the adoption of this, improvement, under all the circumstances, was a necessary or proper precaution on the part of the defendant, was correctly submitted to the jury.”

These cases cited discuss the duty of the carrier to its passengers.. Of course, the duty of a carrier to its passengers is higher- than that, which it owes to others of the traveling public, the latter being only the-use of ordinary care,'while as to the former, in many instances, it may owe the-highest degree of care that human foresight can provide.

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Bluebook (online)
33 A.D. 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weitzman-v-nassau-electric-railroad-nyappdiv-1898.