Opinion
April 1, 1955.
Appeal from Supreme Court, Saratoga County.
Plaintiff's intestate was struck by an automobile owned and driven by Joseph L. Kiley, deceased, while she was walking across Broadway in Saratoga Springs, near the corner of Division Street. It was a rainy night. There was no traffic control signal at the corner. All of the evidence tends to establish that plaintiff's intestate was walking at a normal rate for an elderly lady from east to west within the marked lines of a crosswalk, and had reached a point slightly to the west of the center of the street when she was struck by the car which was proceeding south, knocked to the pavement and sustained severe injuries from which she died twelve days later; that the car had just started from a parked position a short distance to the north and had accelerated to twenty to twenty-five miles per hour; and that the driver of the car did not see plaintiff's intestate at all until about the same time the car struck her. There is no substantial dispute as to these facts. We think the verdict was against the weight of evidence and should be set aside. Judgment reversed, on the law and the facts, and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event. Foster, P.J., Bergan, Coon, Halpern and Zeller, JJ., concur.