142 N.Y.S. 420 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
This action is brought to recover for the pecuniary injury resulting from the death of Francesco Armenti on the 20th of November, 1908, through the caving in of an excavation made through Gold street, in the borough of Brooklyn, for the purpose of constructing a sewer. Plaintiff’s intestate was in the employ of defendants Rodgers and Hagerty, who had a contract with the city of New York for such construction. The Brooklyn Union Gas Company and the Edison Electric Illuminating Company were originally joined with Rodgers & Hagerty as parties defendant. When the action was brought to trial the complaint was dismissed as to the gas company and the illuminating company on the pleadings and opening of counsel. The propriety of this ruling is acquiesced in. At the close of plaintiff’s case the complaint was dismissed as to the defendants Rodgers & Hagerty, and the exceptions were ordered to be heard in the first instance at the Appellate Division of this court. Under such cbcumstances plaintiff is entitled to the most favorable construction of the evidence.
The complaint alleged the service of a notice under the Employers’ Liability Act. When offered in evidence it was excluded as defective and insufficient. The notice is not made a part of this record, and the correctness of this ruling seems to be conceded. Defendant’s liability, if any, must, therefore, rest upon a breach of a master’s obligation to his servant, unaffected by that statute.
The causes for the accident, and the grounds of negligence set forth in the complaint as amplified by the bill of particulars, were various. The one finally relied upon was failure to properly shore, support and secure the sides of the excavation made for the construction of such sewer, and to maintain such shoring so that it should be safe and suitable. The questions presented, therefore, are two-fold: first, does the evidence permit a finding that the subsidence occurred because the shoring
Defendant contends that the beneficent provisions of this statute are to be limited, however, to appliances furnished to an employee, with which he is to perform his labor, and not to structures intended, as was this sheathing, shoring and bracing, to prepare the place where work should be performed and render it more safe. We' deem this construction too narrow. The object of the statute was to procure a safer condition for workmen engaged in work more or less hazardous in character. “The statute must be given a fair and reasonable meaning which will neither extend it beyond nor withdraw it from its intended effect.” (Gombert v. McKay, 201 N. Y. 27.) The thing which by the statute the master is forbidden to do is, first, to “furnish ” things specified which are “ unsafe, unsuitable or improper,” and second, to “erect” such things. The things specified must not alone be “ operated ” so as to give proper protection to the life and limb of a person employed or engaged in work, but must be ,£constructed” and “placed” to secure the same result.
Finally, it is urged upon us that the complaint is not so framed as to charge defendant with liability under this statute,
We have previously considered cases arising out of the same casualty as that from which Armenti’s death resulted. In Di Crescenti v. City of New York (149 App. Div. 816), in which case we reversed a judgment of nonsuit against the same defendants, we did say that the rule of res ipsa loquitur did not apply to the extent that the mere happening of the subsidence, without any evidence as to the probable cause thereof, was, under the circumstances there disclosed, sufficient to impose upon defendants a prima facie liability, and we followed that rule in Tengstrom v. Rodgers (155 App. Div. 405). But we decided in the Di Crescenti case, as we do now, that if the ¿vidence was sufficient to require submission to the jury of the question whether the cause of the subsidence was defective shoring, a nonsuit was improper, although in that case the
It follows that the plaintiff’s exceptions must be sustained and a new trial be granted, costs to abide the event.
Jenks, P. J., Thomas, Carr and Stapleton, JJ., concurred.
Plaintiff’s exceptions sustained on reargument and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.