Fenton v. Second Avenue Railroad
Fenton v. Second Avenue Railroad
Opinion of the Court
—This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover damages for the death of his son, the intestate, alleged to have been caused by the carelessness of the defendant on the 7th day of April, 1888. The material facts are as follows: The defendant operated its horse railroad through Second avenue in the city of New York. Between eleven and twelve o’clock on the day named one of the defendant’s cars was coming up the avenue, and while it was crossing East 25th street, the intestate started from the northwest corner of the street apparently to run diagonally across to the southeast corner, and when he reached the westerly rail of the track upon which the car was running he stumbled and fell on the track in front of the horses, and a portion of
On the part of the defendant the two drivers who were on the front platform of the car were called, one of whom was a driver of nine years' experience, who was there to aid or instruct the driver who had first commenced to drive on that day ; and they testified that two passengers were with them on the platform; that they did not hear Bedles halloo and did not see the boy until he had fallen in front of the horses, and that then they immediately applied the brake and arrested the motion of the car as soon as possible. McCandless, who was a passenger on the front platform, testified that he saw the boy run to cross the track and saw him
If it be assumed that the boy fell twenty feet in front of the horses, as testified to by one of the plaintiff’s witnesses, then the horses going at the usual rate of speed, assuming it to be six miles an hour, would have reached him in about two seconds, and that was all the time the drivers had to see the peril, apply the brake and arrest the motion of the ear before reaching him, and there is no evidence that by the exercise of all the vigilance that the law requires of drivers under such .circumstances they could, after the boy had fallen upon the track, have arrested the car in time to save him from injury. If it be assumed that they saw him as he approached the track, they had the same reason to suppose that he would get across that he had; and he probably would have crossed in front of the horses in safety if he had not fallen. No negligence can be attributed to the drivers because they did not apply the brake before the boy fell, because then, for the first time, the peril commenced and became apparent.
This accident did not happen at a street crossing, but between the upper and lower crossings of the street, and hence the drivers did not have the same reason to expect any one there as at a street crossing.
There was nothing requiring this boy to run across the track at this particular place and time. If he had walked he probably would not have fallen, and if he had waited two or three seconds the car would have passed and he could then have gone over the street in safety. Street railway cars have
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
All concur.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.