104 N.E. 130 | NY | 1914
This plaintiff, an employee of the defendant Fischer, was injured by the fall of a scaffold or runway, and the important question now to be decided is whether section
It is now settled law that the said statute is to be liberally construed to accomplish its beneficent purpose; that is, the better protection of workmen engaged in certain dangerous employments, and that the duty imposed upon the employer to furnish safe scaffolding, etc., cannot be delegated. Scaffolding is thus made by statute a place to work which it is the duty of the employer to furnish. He can no more delegate that duty to some other contractor engaged in the work than to an independent contractor of his own, or one of his own employees, and it can be of no consequence whether he directly employs, or tacitly suffers, another to perform that duty for him.
In this case some means of access to the roof of the pent house was necessary. The appellant furnished none whatever. His employees were thus left to choose between the runway or the less convenient ladder, both furnished by another. Having furnished none of his own he must be held to have adopted the means at hand, or the statute loses its efficacy.
This case is governed by much the same principle as that involved in Quigley v. Thatcher (
We have examined the other reasons urged by the respondent for the affirmance of the judgment of the Appellate Division, but find in none a sufficient justification for the reversal of the judgment of the Trial Term.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the judgment of the Trial Term affirmed, with costs in the Appellate Division and in this court.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., WERNER, HISCOCK, CHASE and CUDDEBACK, JJ., concur; COLLIN, J., not voting.
Order reversed, etc.