37 N.Y.S. 977 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
This case is by no means free from circumstances which cast suspicion upon the bona tides of the claim which lies at its foundation. That the plaintiff, after receiving the injury complained of, and which crushed one of his hands so completely as to make subsequent amputation necessary, should deliberately request a coemployé to hold his lantern in proper position, so that he could examine and ascertain the cause of his injury, evinces a control of the nervous system so remarkable and rare that one is inclined to qualify his admiration for the courage displayed, with a slight tinge of scepticism. However, the story related by the plaintiff appears to have received the approval of the jury, and their verdict must therefore be regarded as removing the case from the realm of controversy so far as any issue of fact is concerned; and consequently the only question which demands our serious consideration is whether or not the facts testified to by the plaintiff establish any cause of action against this defendant. The most that can be claimed from the evidence, which, so far as it relates to the accident, is confined to the plaintiff’s own testimony, is that this plaintiff, with considerable experience in like occupations, entered into the defendant’s service on the 28th day of March, 1892; and that on that very night, while attempting, in the course of his employment, to couple two cars which were coming together upon one of the tracks in defendant’s yard in the city of Eochester, he stepped into a hole which had been left between two tracks; and that, in his effort to recover himself, he involuntarily threw his arm up in such manner that his hand came between the two cars, and was crushed. He says that he then called to a man near him (who, it seems, was the defendant’s witness Smith) to bring his lantern, and hold it so that he could see what was the matter, and that he then, for the first time, discovered this hole, which was about ten inches wide and eight inches deep, and which had the appearance of having been dug out so as to enable some one to tamp the ties, and then left without being refilled.
In considering the question which this state of facts presents, it may be assumed that it was the duty of the defendant to furnish the plaintiff with a reasonably safe and proper place in which to prosecute the work required of him; and there is no pretense that the obligation which thus rested upon the master in this case would not have been fully met in the conditions which surrounded the plaintiff at the time he received his injury but for this hole, for without it the place in which the plaintiff was required to render service was, for aught that appears, as safe as could reasonably have been required, and it was only rendered unsafe by the intervention of some third person, who was unquestionably a track hand, and therefore a coservant of the plaintiff, for whose negligence the defendant was in no wise responsible, unless it had either actual or constructive notice of the existence of the defect in its roadbed. Filbert v. Oanal Co., 121 N. Y. 207, 23 N. E. 1104.
Judgment and order reversed, and new trial granted, with costs to abide the event of this action. All concur, except WARD, J., dissenting.
Por dissenting opinion of Ward, J., see 38 N. Y. Supp. 42.