107 N.Y.S. 1001 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff brings this action to recover damages of his employer for personal injuries sustained while engaged in cleaning out a cer
The purpose of the pleader was to bring his action within the provisions of the Employers’ Liability Act, and this was the theory on which the case was submitted to the jury, although the pleadings were broad enough to state a cause of action at common law, and there were some suggestions in the charge to the jury which would indicate that the learned court recognized that there was room for finding a verdict under the common-law duty of the master to give proper instructions to a green hand in the operation of the machine which produced the injury.
It is important at the outset to determine whether the plaintiff has fulfilled the requirements of the statute in reference to employers’ liability for the negligence of one intrusted with superintendence, for upon this must depend in a large measure the disposition to be made of this ease on appeal. Chapter 600 of the Laws of 1902 is entitled “ An Act to extend and regulate the liability-of employers,”
, What has the plaintiff done toward complying with this provision requiring notice of the time, place and cause of the injury? Ho such written notice and no copy of such notice is contained in the record; both of the defendants, who were in a position to know, ■ testify without qualification that they never received any such notice, and the plaintiff’s case rests upon the testimony of one Caridi, who was permitted to state the contents of a letter alleged to have been written by him, at the request of the plaintiff, three years before. According to this witness he wrote a letter about as follows: “ Dear Sir: While working on the 20th of September, 1903, in your factory, being in the employ of your factory, and working at the mixing machine, I was injured, and through the injury I had sufferings and an opeiatioh at the hospital, where they took my finger off. Therefore, I ask for a life position where I can earn an honest living.” Under leading questions the witness said that in this letter (which was not addressed to either of the defendants individually, but to Hess Brothers) he stated that wliiile he, plaintiff, was working under this employment,. “ he was hurted with a inixing machine, or something of that kind, while working at it, and the blame was of the foreman. Therefore, he asked them for.a life position.without going to any more trouble, something on this subject. That is the best of my recollection.”
Clearly the plaintiff did not write this letter for the purpose of giving the notice required by the statute, but for the purpose of asking for a position. There is no statement in the letter as given which tells the place where .the accident occurred, except that it was stated to be in the defendants’'factory, and, perhaps, that it was located on West Thirtieth street, wherever that might be. The defendants may have had a dozen factories, and the notice that “ the ' blame was" of the foreman ” was not a notice of the cause of the injury through the negligent act of a person “ entrusted with and
The suggestion of counsel, on the authority of Sheehy v. City of New York (160 N. Y. 139), that a substantial compliance with the statute requiring notice is sufficient, would be pertinent if this was an action in which the Legislature had attempted to limit the common-law rights of the plaintiff by requiring a notice as a condition precedent to the assertion of a'common-law right. In such a case it is proper to give the plaintiff the benefit of a liberal construction, but where the plaintiff’s rights have been enlarged, on condition that he shall comply with certain regulations prescribed by the statute, and the., rights of the defendant must have been encroached upon, there is no occasion for such a concession, and the books are full of cases in which the requirement even of these limiting statutes that notice of the cause shall be given is held to be not satisfied without telling the facts substantially as they have occurred.
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed,
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the opinion of Mr. Justice -Lambebt in so far as he holds that the notice claimed to have been served by the plaintiff was defective and wholly insufficient to enable him to maintain the action under the Employers’ Liability Act (Laws of 1902, chap. 600).
I am also of the opinion that even if it be held that the notice was sufficient, then the evidence did not establish that the plaintiff’s injury was caused “by reason of the negligence of any person in the service of the employer entrusted with and exercising superintendence whose sole or principal duty is that of superintendence.” Sommers, the person whose negligent act is alleged to have caused the accident, was employed by the defendants, not as a superintendent, but as a servant. His duties were to operate the machine called the dough mixer and rollers used in the manufacture of lozenges, with the assistance of three or four other employees, among whom was the plaintiff. He had nothing whatever to do with the other workmen in the factory, and had no authority to employ or discharge men working with him. The defendants, at the time, did have in their employ a superintendent, one Hausrath, whose sole or principal duty was superintending or supervising the work of other employees. Hausrath was in the factory at the time the accident occurred, and was then engaged in the performance of his duties as superintendent. Sommers was in no sense a superintendent. He was engaged in the defendants’ business, together with other employees, with incidental authority to supervise the work of his assistants, one of whom was the plaintiff. A superintendent, within the meaning of the Employers’ Liability Act, must be one “whose sole or principal duty is that df superintendence and mere incidental authority to exercise some minor supervision over others is not enough to render the employer liable under the act. (McConnell v. Morse I. W. & D. D. Co., 187 N. Y. 341; Abrahamson v. General Supply & Construction Co., 112 App. Div. 318; Quinlan v. Lackawanna Steel Co., 107 id. 176; Hughes v. Russell, 104 id. 144.)
Dor do I think a cause of action was established at common law. Sommers was a coservant of the plaintiff. They were both engaged in a common employment, which was the manufacture of candy, and for his negligence defendants were not liable. The fact that
The danger of injury, in case the machine should be started while the plaintiff’s hand was in a position where it could be caught by the knives of the mixing machine, was SO' obvious and apparent that instruction was unnecessary. This being so, negligence' could not be based on a failure to give instructions with reference to it. (Crown v. Orr, 140 N. Y. 450; White v. Wittemann Lith. Co., 131 id. 631.)
The judgment and order"appealed from should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellants to abide event.
Patterson, P. J., Houghton and Scott; JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellants to abide event.