178 N.Y. 84 | NY | 1904
This is an action to recover damages for alleged personal injuries. The jury found a verdict in favor of .the plaintiff for one thousand dollars and judgment was duly entered thereon.
The Appellate Division states in its order on reversing this judgment that it was upon questions of law only and that the facts had been examined and no error found therein. It is, therefore, incumbent on the plaintiff, appellant, to show that there was no error of law justifying the reversal of the judgment.
The plaintiff resides in the city of Syracuse, and at the time of her injury, the 17th of Bovember, 1898, was employed by the defendant company as a cleaner in its freight office; she had filled this position since the May previous. In the floor of this office, outside of the desks and in the space for the public, was a trap door located near the wall of the building. It was proved that beneath the floor of this office was the heating plant, consisting of steam pipes and other appliances. The trap door in question was to enable plumbers to
The manner of the construction and operation of the trap door has a controlling bearing on this case. The plaintiff swore a carpenter as an expert, who had examined the premises, and he testified in part as follows : “ This trap door that was in the floor was 25 1/2 inches long and 22 1 /2 inches wide. It is on the east side of the freight office. * * * The edge of the hole is one foot from the mop-board on that side of the office. It extends out from that 22 1/2 inches. The cover of this hole is made of the same material of which the floor is made. The boards are hard pine an inch and an eighth thick. There are nine boards making this cover — nine pieces. There is a batten nine inches wide on the underside ; the boards are screwed or fastened to this batten. * * * , Bow the * * * floor is so made that it gives a bearing to each end of this little door of an inch and a half; and when the door is laid down in its place it is flush with the floor, smooth, so you walk over it. There are no hinges on it. * * * When down in its place p>roperly * * * it is virtually a portion of the floor, and is a good tight fit. It fits flush with the floor. * * * If the door was in its proper piosition in the floor one would possibly pass it without noticing that there was a trap door there. * * * I saw them take it out. The man that took it out had to take a little screw driver and prat it under this corner here to pray it up. Then when 1 was done with my measurements, laid it down, gave it a kick with my toe to knock it back into its place and it went down. * * * It fits in there very tight.”
At the time of the • accident plumbers were at work beneath the floor on the steam-heating apparatus and had opened the trap) door in order to reach the place.
The plaintiff, at about half-past three o’clock in the afternoon, while engaged in her work, approached the south side of the office, near the location of the trap door. She thus
The trial judge submitted this case to the jury in an exceedingly fair charge. He stated to them, in substance, that in an action based on negligence the plaintiff must show that the injury happened by reason of some negligence on the part of the defendant, without any negligence on the part of the plaintiff that has contributed in any degree to the result; that the duty was upon the defendant to furnish a reasonably safe place for its servants, of whom the plaintiff was one, for the discharge of the duties that they were employed to perform. He then told the jury, with considerable elaboration, that he proposed to submit to them the question whether the defend
He said: “ According to the evidence of Mr. Hunt this door, when it was fully in place, was apparently solid and tight. If so, the inference naturally would follow that at the time the plaintiff stepped upon it and it had tipped it had been removed to some extent from its original place, so that the tipping occurred, and the inference perhaps may be drawn (it is your duty to draw it if anybody does) that the plumbers, ■who were at work below upon this day, when they went down,' instead .of placing this trap door squarely over the hole, left it raised a little upon one side, so that there was occasion for the tipping. If those employees, those plumbers below, were negligent in the manner in which they left it, if they were careless, I say to you, for the purpose of this case, the defendant is not liable for their negligence; and if their, negligence was the sole and only cause of the accident, then the plaintiff could not recover. If, however, the defendant was also careless; if it failed to furnish there a reasonably safe place; if, by reason of this door being constructed as it was without any hinges (which, as it is claimed, was an important circumstance, and that, of course, is for you), but constructed as it was, and being there just as it was, for the purpose for which it was there placed, and with such a liability as niay be shown here of its being used; if the defendant failed to perform its duty? and, therefore, was careless, and such carelessness also contributed to the result, then the defendant would not be relieved, because the employees were also negligent.” The plumbers in question were in the permanent employ of the defendant company.
The Appellate Division approved the charge of the trial judge, save in one particular, where it submitted to the jury the question whether the defendant had performed the duty resting upon it, of furnishing a reasonably safe place for plaintiff to work when discharging the duties of her employment. The learned court were of the opinion that this ease falls
The rule laid down in these cases is the correct one, and has been strictly adhered to by this court.
We are constrained to differ with the court below as to the application of this rule in the present case. In Perry v. Rogers (supra) a very different situation was presented. The head note of that case states the facts as follows: “ When the employer of competent workmen engaged in blasting down a ledge of rock, on the face of which they necessarily work, has provided them with the necessary and proper appliances and with" a skillful foreman, the removal from a spot where a blast has been exploded of a threatening overhanging rock, made dangerous by the work, before undertaking to remove the blasted rock beneath, is an ordinary incidental detail, as to which the employer is not bound to direct a workman, but which may" be properly left to the foreman; and if the foreman, on sending a workman to clear a blasted spot, omits to remove or to notify the workman to remove a threatening piece of rock before working directly under it, he is in that respect a fellow-servant; and if the piece falls and injures the workman, the negligence, if there is any except on the part of the workman himself, is that of' the foreman as a fellow-servant, and does not constitute a breach of the employer’s duty.”
The Appellate Division quotes, in part, the following from the opinion of Parker, Ch. J., in that case: “ But it has not been understood to be the rule in this state that in the performance of work of this character the master, after making his place in the first instance reasonably safe for the prosecution of the work, has any duty to perform other than in the furnishing of safe appliances and the employment of competent and skillful employees.”
The Appellate Division then says: “ Tested by the rule as
The learned Appellate Division in thus summing up the evidence has omitted, as it seems to us, the one controlling fact, which was a proper inference from the evidence, if the jury saw fit to draw it, that the plumbers from beneath could not close the trap door and bring it down to a level with the surrounding floor, for the reason that it was a very tight fit and required considerable force from above to drive it back into position. It was for the jury to say whether what did hajopen was not likely to occur, in the absence of hinges on the trap door, which would have held it firmly in place, so that it would have been either wide open and the aperture perfectly obvious, or practically closed, substantially covering the opening and immovable if stepped upon.
We are of opinion that it was an open question for the jury to answer, under all the circumstances, whether the defendant had furnished a safe place in which the plaintiff was required to work.
It follows that there was no question of law presented justifying the reversal of the judgment in plaintiff’s favor.
The order and judgment of the Appellate Division should-be reversed and the judgment of the trial court affirmed, with costs to plaintiff in all the courts.
O’Brien, IIaight, Vann, Cullen and Werner, JJ"., concur ; Parker, Oh. J., absent.
Order and judgment reversed, etc.