Opinion
April 2, 1926.
Bertram G. Eadie, for the plaintiffs.
Reed, Jenkins, Dimmick Finnegan, for the defendant.
The plaintiffs move for orders setting aside the verdicts rendered by the jury in favor of the defendant and for a new trial, on the ground that they have discovered perjury in a part of the defendant's testimony. The plaintiff Mae C. O'Leary was injured in the defendant's amusement park at Coney Island on the 3d day of July, 1923, while she was a patron of an attraction known as "The Whirlpool." The second action is brought by her husband. The cases were tried in December, 1924.
Defendant's negligence was predicated by the plaintiffs upon the faulty construction of the attraction in that there was not sufficient covering or padding on the inward projection of the edge of the bowl, against which patrons slid when thrown from the top of the center by the centrifugal force resulting from the revolutions of the bowl. The cases were submitted to the jury upon the theory that the apparatus was not reasonably safe in its construction.
Three of the defendant's employees testified that no similar accident had ever occurred. In a case against the same defendant, tried in Queens county in March, 1925, the plaintiff claimed to have been injured in the same bowl on the 6th day of July, 1923, by reason of the catching of her foot in a tear in the padding. Upon the discovery of the record in that case in the Appellate Division of this court by the plaintiffs, these motions were made. The claim there was not based upon the theory of defective construction of the bowl, but upon negligence in keeping it in proper repair.
Evidence that for a period of years experience has proven an instrumentality to be sufficient and proper for the purpose for which it is intended is admissible, and this may be proven by showing that for a period of time no similar accident has occurred. ( Loftus v. Union Ferry Co. of Brooklyn, 84 N.Y. 455, 460; Dougan v. Champlain Transp. Co., 56 id. 1; Crocheron v. North Shore Staten Island Ferry Co., Id. 656; Hubbell v. City of Yonkers, 104 id. 434, 439; Butler v. Village of Oxford, 186 id. 444, 446.) But evidence that an accident happened because of the lack of proper repairs on a sufficient instrumentality would not be relevant or competent on the issue of whether or not an accident was occasioned by reason of defective or inadequate construction. (See Gillrie v. City of Lockport, 122 N.Y. 403, 406, 407.) In this case it would have been reversible error to have permitted evidence as to the injury caused by the tear. ( Brady v. Manhattan R. Co., 127 N.Y. 46; Paul v. Consolidated Fire Works Co., 177 A.D. 85, 88; Morrow v. Westchester Electric R. Co., 54 id. 592; affd., 172 N.Y. 638.)
Plaintiffs charge perjury in the testimony of the three witnesses called by the defendant. In such cases a new trial will be granted only where two factors concur: (1) Where the perjury is clearly established; and (2) where the perjury relates to a competent and material fact. The accidents were in fact dissimilar, and the cases were tried upon entirely dissimilar theories. Further, the perjury claimed relates to a fact which of itself was incompetent and irrelevant in these cases, and, therefore, was immaterial and under the rule new trials cannot be granted. ( Lynch v. McCabe, 126 A.D. 744. See, also, Hansen v. Vogelsang, 139 N.Y. 759 ; Shanahan v. Feltman, 154 id. 809, 813; Hammond v. Delaware, L. W.R.R. Co., 140 id. 810; Laskofsky v. Pocahontas Consol. Collieries Co., 179 id. 861.)
Motions denied, without costs.