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Heffron v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co.

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
May 28, 1918
119 N.E. 1024 (N.Y. 1918)

Opinion

Argued May 9, 1918

Decided May 28, 1918

Charles A. Hitchcock and John L. Robertson for appellant. A.H. Cowie for respondent.


The plaintiff tripped over a wire hung from posts in that part of the grounds surrounding the Canastota depot which is devoted to a grass and flower plot, and sustained personal injuries. This action is brought to recover damages for such injuries.

There have been two trials of the action. The plaintiff recovered a verdict at the first trial but the judgment entered thereon was reversed by the Appellate Division and a new trial granted "As against the weight of evidence both as to the defendant's negligence and the plaintiff's freedom from contributory negligence." ( Heffron v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co., 140 App. Div. 943.) Two of the justices of that court dissented. On the second trial the evidence taken on the first trial was submitted. The plaintiff's complaint was dismissed. On appeal the Appellate Division affirmed the judgment entered upon such dismissal. Two justices of the court dissented and voted "For reversal on the ground that the case presented an issue of fact which should have been submitted to the jury. This court [the Appellate Division] reversed a judgment for the plaintiff on a former appeal on the ground that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence and ordered a new trial ( 140 App. Div. 943), at which new trial the evidence should again have been submitted to the jury; the record in the second trial being precisely the same as that in the first." ( Heffron v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co., 175 App. Div. 962.)

The only question for consideration on appeal to this court is whether the record discloses a question of fact that should have been submitted to the jury.

The defendant's four-track railroad passes through the village of Canastota from east to west and adjoining such tracks on the south is the track of the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company. Peterboro street in said village crosses said railroad tracks at right angles. The defendant's depot is west of Peterboro street and is surrounded by a platform. The distance from the east end of the platform to Peterboro street is about one hundred feet. About one hundred feet south of the defendant's tracks and the track of the Lehigh Valley railroad are the electrified tracks of the West Shore railroad which tracks there run parallel with the defendant's railroad. The West Shore railroad tracks run south of the defendant's depot and the depot is used in common by the railroads mentioned. There is, as shown, a parcel of uninclosed land occupied by the defendant which is about one hundred feet square bounded on the east by Peterboro street, on the west by the platform of the defendant's railroad depot, on the north by the railroad tracks as stated and on the south by the West Shore railroad tracks. There is a cinder path about twelve feet wide running along the northerly side of this parcel of land and extending from the depot platform to Peterboro street. There is also a plank walk parallel to the West Shore railroad tracks extending along the southerly side of this parcel of land from the platform to Peterboro street. Between the two walks there is on the north a level piece of ground about sixteen feet wide extending from the platform to Peterboro street which is devoted to grass, except that on either end there are rose bushes and perhaps other shrubs and flowers. South of this grass, and flower plot there is an open space about forty feet wide used for teams and vehicles. Between the open space so used for teams and vehicles and the plank walk, there is a piece of land five or six feet wide that is also devoted to grass and shrubbery. Erected between this grass plot and the platform is a railing dividing one from the other. The shrubs and flowers on the grass plot first mentioned are confined to the ends thereof leaving the center for fifteen or more feet a plain lawn. About three feet from the southerly side of the grass plot and in the center thereof the defendant for more than one year prior to the accident maintained a wire attached to posts. The wire was attached to the posts about one foot from the ground, but it sagged in the center so that it was there about eight and three-quarter inches above the ground.

The plaintiff, a young lady eighteen years old, but who had not been in Canastota since she was a small child, came to that village with her brother on July 4, and spent the afternoon and evening there. After a display of fireworks in the village they started for the depot to take an electric car which was due to arrive about 9:34 P.M. When at the corner of a hotel building on the west side of Peterboro street next north of the railroad tracks they saw the electric car arriving. The car stopped opposite the eastern end of the defendant's depot and people were entering it. The plaintiff, holding her brother by the hand, started with others, some of whom were ahead of them, in a diagonal direction from Peterboro street, across the railroad track and the open grass plot in a direct line for the electric car. They tripped and fell over the wire that we have described and the plaintiff received serious injuries.

The record contains testimony showing that people going to and from the railroad depot had for a long time prior to the accident to the plaintiff crossed the defendant's northerly grass plot from time to time without any express restrictions. A policeman of the village who had been on duty about the depot grounds for several years, referring to a time before the accident to the plaintiff, testified that he had many times observed that grass plot being used by the public in going to and from the depot and the cars. He also testified that when a car was arriving at the depot it was usual for the public to cross the grass plot. He also testified that he had seen pedestrians trip over that wire a dozen or more times and that he mentioned to "some of the railroad men" that he had seen people trip over the wire. Other testimony was given that people passed over the grass plot at different times going to and from the depot. The jury might have found that notice to the defendant was fairly to be inferred from such testimony.

The night of the accident was dark and the grass plot was not lighted, but there was testimony for the jury's consideration in substance that on the night in question there was a direct course apparently unobstructed from where the plaintiff started at the corner of the hotel building to the place where the electric car stopped, and that other people were crossing along such direct and unobstructed way.

The grass plot constituted a part of the defendant's property. While its purpose was for ornamentation and not expressly for use by its passengers, the possibility of its use by passengers, particularly at times when and unusual number of persons were being cared for and carried by the railroad, was a fact that should have been considered by the defendant in determining the probability of the grass plot being used by persons hastening to or from trains or cars. The plaintiff was a patron of one of the railroads using the defendant's depot and surrounding grounds. She was on its property by invitation. It is claimed, however, that the invitation was restricted to the parts of the defendant's grounds that were intended by it for walks or paths.

It is the duty of a railroad corporation to provide for a passenger a safe passage to the train he desires to take and to take reasonable care that he shall not while on its premises be exposed to any unnecessary danger or to one of which it is aware. ( Carpenter v. Boston Albany R.R. Co., 97 N.Y. 494.)

If the person is on the property of another by invitation arising out of a common interest or mutual advantage between them, the owner owes such person a duty and a failure to perform that duty subjects him to liability. The plaintiff in this case was not on the defendant's property generally as a licensee, or as a trespasser. In that respect her case is entirely different from that of Larmore v. Crown Point Iron Company ( 101 N.Y. 391). The measure of the defendant's duty was reasonable prudence and care, but reasonable prudence and care to be measured by the circumstances and surroundings of which the defendant was aware. In Sterger v. Van Sicklen ( 132 N.Y. 499, 503) the court say: "There are cases where the use to which an owner of property puts it is of such a public character that he is bound to observe reasonable care in keeping it in such a condition as to save, harmless, those who are invited to come on to it for the benefit and profit of the owner."

In this case there was some evidence for the jury to consider as to the sufficiency of the alleged restrictions in the use of the defendant's depot grounds. Were the restrictions adequate and sufficient so that the defendant was justified in leaving a wire as described? If the defendant, instead of hanging the wire in the interior of the plot and so near to the ground that it was practically useless to prevent people crossing the grass plot in the day time when they could see and step over it and so close to the ground that it was not easily discernible in the night time, had placed a railing between the cinder path and the grass plot as it did between the platform and the grass plot on the southerly side of the depot grounds, the danger of injury to its patrons would have been minimized or wholly avoided. There is a distinction between the obligation of an owner of private property wholly outside the boundaries of a highway and the obligation of a railroad company maintaining on its depot grounds a grass plot for ornamental purposes where at times such as a public holiday the use of such grass plot by pedestrians is not only possible but probable.

Was the defendant under all the circumstances negligent in maintaining a wire of a kind, at a place, and at a height from the ground where it did maintain it in the grass plot of the depot grounds, and was the plaintiff who was unfamiliar with the surroundings guilty of contributory negligence in crossing the grass plot?

The question before us is not one as to the weight of evidence but simply whether as a matter of law the questions suggested relating to the alleged negligence of the defendant and contributory negligence of the plaintiff were questions of fact.

We think that the nonsuit was improperly granted. The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.

HOGAN, POUND, McLAUGHLIN and ANDREWS, JJ., concur; HISCOCK, Ch. J., and CARDOZO, J., not voting.

Judgment reversed, etc.


Summaries of

Heffron v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co.

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
May 28, 1918
119 N.E. 1024 (N.Y. 1918)
Case details for

Heffron v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co.

Case Details

Full title:LUELLA HEFFRON, an Infant, by WILLIAM HEFFRON, Her Guardian ad Litem…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: May 28, 1918

Citations

119 N.E. 1024 (N.Y. 1918)
119 N.E. 1024

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