102 A.D. 330 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The plaintiff, an employee of the defendant, was injured by reason of his little finger coining in contact with a revolving knife in a cloth-cutting machine which he was operating. The machine, whose base was a smooth, circular disc, was operated by being shoved along the cutting table by hand, the revolution of the knife being produced by a current of electricity introduced by a wire attached to the machine. The machine was designed to be operated on a table having a perfectly smooth surface, and such tables were supplied by the defendant, the plaintiff prior to the accident having been accustomed to work upon such a table. Just prior to the accident he was directed by the foreman to go to another table and cut a pile of silk placed thereon, and while engaged in doing so received the injury, as he claims, by reason of the jumping or jolting of the machine caused by the uneven surface of the table, and, as claimed by the defendant, by reason of his lifting the machine from the table without turning off the electricity.
The table at which the accident happened was not designed for use with the cutting machine, but with knife and shears. The court submitted the case to the jury to say whether there was negligence on the part of the defendant in sending the plaintiff to work upon this table with an unguarded machine, holding that, so far as the absence of a guard itself was concerned, the plaintiff assumed the risk. Assuming that the act of the foreman in directing the plaintiff to work upon this table was the act of the master, the case was fully and fairly submitted to the jury by the learned trial judge; the requests to charge which were refused other than as charged were fully covered by the main charge so far as they were applicable to the facts of the case, both as to the plaintiff’s contributory negligence, his assumption of risk and the defendant’s negligence; no errors were committed prejudicial to the defendant; the character of the wound tended strongly to corroborate the plaintiff’s version, and the verdict cannot be said to be against the weight of evidence.
The serious and sole question presented by this record is, was the act of the foreman in directing the plaintiff to work upon this table the act of the master, because concededly the master had furnished a suitable and proper table, but by direction of the foreman the
And the question remains whether the pleadings and proof bring the case within the so-called Employers’ Liability Act, and whether that statute has changed the rule involved. Subdivision 2 of section 1 of chapter 600 of the Laws of 1902 undoubtedly has changed the rule of Crispin v. Babbitt (supra), and, therefore, the foreman, in the case at bar, was not a fellow-servant, and his negligence was that of the master.
The appellant raises the question on this appeal' that the complaint doe§ not allege facts sufficient to establish statutory liability ;
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Present — Bartlett, Jenks, Hooker, Rich and Miller, JJ.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.