98 N.Y.S. 770 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
Bo mention having been made by the defendant upon the minutes of the court for a new trial, and' no order having been entered refusing to grant such new trial, only questions of law are presented by this appeal, which is taken from the judgment only (Collier v. Collins, 172 N. Y. 101); and. the plaintiff is entitled to have the evidence construed most favorably to him to establish any fact necessary to support the judgment.
It is urged by-the appellant that the evidence so construed fails as matter of law to establish a cause of action in plaintiff’s favor.
On the 19th day of December, 1903, and for some time previous, the plaintiff was in defendant’s employ, engaged with a number of others in repairing bridges upon its railroad. He was a member of the bridge gang, so called, of which one Beilly was foreman. On the day of the accident Beilly was absent from the work and assumed to direct one Mickel to take charge of the men,, whether
It is claimed that the defendant is liable upon two grounds: First, because Mickel, while acting as superintendent, attempted to move the tie in front of the approaching express train, and that he was • negligent in the performance of such work, and, second, because he failed to give warning of the approach of the express train. ,
As to the first ground upon which liability is sought to be predicated, we think it is apparent that the act of Mickel in attempting to move the tie across the track was not an act of superintendence, but was the act of a coemployee, for which the defendant is not liable. Liability for negligence in superintending is what is created by the statute, and not for the negligent act of a superintendent in no manner connected with liis duties as such. ' (Quinlan v. Lackawanna Steel Co., 107 App. Div. 176.)
As to the second ground upon which it is claimed the defendant is liable, to wit, the failure .of. Mickel to give warning of the approach of the express train, it is sufficient to say ,that that was not the proximate cause of the accident. The plaintiff was in a safe place except as it was rendered unsafe by the negligent act of Mickel. No train was approaching on the track upon which he was standing. If he had been notified that a train was approaching upon one track he would only have stepped upon another, and the
All concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide event, upon questions of law only.