Court Opinion

ID: 8069179
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 11:16:01.418145+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:38:13.871734
License: Public Domain

PER CURIAM.
Action for personal injuries. Jury found for plaintiff. Defendant claims that verdict is against the evidence. The plaintiff’s testimony shows that he was in the. employ of Naughton Sz Co. in blasting tunnels underneath Broadway. His duties were to attend to the blasting wires and to the battery, passing the wires down to the foreman, who was beneath the street level, and who connected them with the explosive. The plaintiff then connected the wires with the battery, stationed alongside of him, and upon a signal from the foreman set off the blast. In doing this work it was necessary for the plaintiff to watch the man working underneath, and to receive a signal from the. foreman before connecting the wires, and when he was putting in the wires he had to bend over the tracks to see that the wires were all right underneath. As usual under such circumstances, plaintiff, on the morning of the accident, had put up seven red flags between the two sets of tracks, indicating danger ahead, and warning the cars to go slowly. On previous occasions, when the plaintiff had done this work, and was in a bending position, the cars came along slowly, and rang the bell, and, when necessary, came to a stop; and, whenever the plaintiff was charging the battery, the car would stop until he got out of the way. On the occasion of the accident plaintiff was engaged in the work at a point between 50. and 75 feet from Fifty-Seventh street on Broadway, and was laying down the wires. He was on the uptown track. While bending, he watched for approaching cars. He looked ahead of him, but did not see any uptown car approaching. He then dropped the wire into the tunnel to the foreman, and, before he had a chance to get the wires out, a *159north-bound car came rapidly along, and, without prior ' signal or warning, struck him, throwing him against a downtown car, which was approaching, which also struck and dragged him. The car that first struck plaintiff was identified by plaintiff’s witnesses as a red car of the Forty-Second street line. There was a conflict as to some of the facts, but the jury believed plaintiff, and there is sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.
(November 12, 1903.)