The plaintiff was injured while engaged in removing a wagon which the defendant had left over night in Cherry alley in the city of Hudson, in a wheel of which the whiffletrees of the ice wagon upon which plaintiff was riding had become entangled. The court submitted to the jury four propositions, as to whether Cherry alley was a public thoroughfare; if so, whether defendant storing its wagon in Cherry alley constituted a nuisance; if so, whether such nuisance caused injury to plaintiff; and lastly, the amount of damages.
In trying to remove defendant’s wagon so that plaintiff’s wagon might pass, plaintiff cramped defendant’s wagon so that one of the front wheels rested against the hub of plaintiff’s wagon. Plaintiff then went to the end of the thill of defendant’s wagon and while endeavoring to draw the wagon away, having both hands at the end of the thill, the team of plaintiff’s wagon started, throwing the thill to the north and forcing plaintiff against a brick wall with iron projections, driving the thill into plaintiff’s body at the lower extremity, injuring him seriously.
At the close of the charge plaintiff’s attorney requested the court to charge: “ If the jury believe the defendant obstructed a public thoroughfare which amounted to a nuisance and that the plaintiff was injured thereby, the defendant cannot be relieved from the liability by any act of the plaintiff, Jostlen, unless it be by an act from which it can be affirmed that he caused the injury himself, with a full knowledge of its probable consequences. The "Court: I so charge,” to which the defendant excepted. The verdict was for $2,000, This request excluded the element of contributory negligence, and was error in holding that the defendant was liable unless plaintiff caused the injury himself with a full knowledge of the consequences. This instruction coming at the close of a somewhat extended charge was prejudicial and requires a reversal of the judgment and order appealed from.
All concurred, except Smith, P. J., dissenting in opinion, in which Betts, J., concurred.