195 N.Y. 415 | NY | 1909
The plaintiff was injured while engaged in repairing one of defendant's cars in its shop in the borough of Manhattan in the city of New York. The car was forty-seven feet long, eight feet six inches wide and sixteen feet high. It was "jacked up" about six feet above the floor so that its height over all was about twenty-two feet. Around the car there had been placed a staging consisting of "painters' horses" constructed like ladders with rungs about twelve inches apart. Upon these "horses" were placed planks about eight feet above the floor. The plaintiff was standing at work upon a plank which formed a part of the staging on the south side of the car when it broke and precipitated him to the floor, causing the injuries for which he seeks to recover in this action. At the Trial Term the complaint was dismissed. At the Appellate Division the judgment entered upon that decision was reversed and a new trial granted. Upon defendant's appeal to this court the two principal questions presented are, whether the staging upon which the plaintiff was standing when it gave way was a scaffold, and whether the car upon which he was at work was a structure *418 within the purview of sections 18 and 19 of the statute commonly known as the Labor Law (L. 1897, ch. 415).
Before the enactment of that statute it had been held that a staging or scaffolding erected for workmen was not a place in which to do their work, but an appliance or instrumentality by means of which the work was to be done, and the logical corollary of that conclusion was that when the master had exercised reasonable care in the selection of competent fellow-workmen and suitable materials for the proper construction of the appliance, he was not liable for injuries sustained by one workman through the fault or negligence of another. (Butler v. Townsend,
In considering this statute in the case of Stewart v.Ferguson (
Thus far there is no difficulty in ascertaining the legislative purpose; beyond it there is doubt and uncertainty. And the trouble arises from the inherent impossibility of defining in unequivocal phrase the physical objects mentioned in the statute. What is a scaffold? What is a structure? These are the vexed questions which the courts are constantly being called upon to answer in cases involving an infinite variety of practical conditions. Experience has shown that they are questions which cannot be solved by academic discussion, and that even when they are applied to concrete facts they often lead judicial minds to radically divergent conclusions. In the case at bar the question is whether the car above described is a structure within the meaning of the law. Counsel for the defendant, in a very lucid and forceful argument, invokes the rule of ejusdem generis. His contention reduced to its shortest statement is that the general word "structure" must be limited by and comprehended within the specific terms "house" and "building," and when thus construed it necessarily excludes all structures which do not fall within the generic description of houses and buildings. To this argument counsel for the plaintiff replies that the words "house" and "building" are in themselves so general and comprehensive that the word "structure" cannot possibly broaden or amplify their meaning, and need not necessarily be associated therewith; that the term "structure" was used, not to make more definite the description of "house" and *420 "building," but to enlarge to the fullest extent the list of artificial physical objects to which the reason of the statute can be applied. The question is not free from doubt, but we incline to the view that the rule of ejusdem generis does not apply. The term "house" as used in common speech embraces every form of structure designed for human habitation, but in a legal sense it is even more comprehensive, as is shown by the statutes relating to burglary, arson and other crimes which involve acts committed in or upon buildings or structures. A building is a structure which, of course, includes every form of artificial house; but also many structures not included in that more restricted term. And so the word "structure" in its broadest sense includes any production or piece of work artificially built up or composed of parts joined together in some definite manner, and its extended legal signification can easily be gathered from the great variety of subjects to which it is applied in creating and penalizing what are known as statutory misdemeanors. In cases like this, lexicographers' definitions are useful as guide posts, but they do not take us to our destination. The statutory meaning of a word or phrase must be gathered from the purpose for which the law containing it was enacted. Under the common law it was often difficult to fix the legal responsibility for accidents arising from defective scaffoldings and stagings. In many cases where the master should have been held liable, he escaped under cover of the fellow-servant doctrine; and in many more he was mulcted in damages for the negligence of others in details which he could not control. This was the evil sought to be remedied by a statute designed to charge the master with a more rigid and personal responsibility for the erection of scaffoldings and stagings, and to assure the servant, who takes no part in their construction, of greater safety in their use. A scaffold is no more dangerous when used in erecting, repairing, altering or painting a house or building, than when used for the same purpose upon any structure where the same kind of a scaffold is necessary. The dangers to the employee are the same, and the evils of the common-law rule sought to be remedied by the *421 statute are alike in each case. It is to be observed, moreover, that the word "structure" is not joined to "building" and "house" by the adjective "other," but by a simple "or," so that the language is "house, building or structure." The word "or" here takes the place of a comma, and this grammatical construction indicates that the word "structure" has as distinct and separate a meaning as "building" has from "house."
This broad and practical view of the statute was taken by the Appellate Division in the fourth department in Chaffee v.Union Dry Dock Co. (
When we undertake to define a scaffold or scaffolding we meet even greater difficulties. It is like reasoning in a circle *422
to attempt to define "scaffolding" and "structures" in their relation to each other. On the one hand it may be argued that anything large enough to require the use of a scaffold in the work of erection or repair may very properly be dignified by the title of "structure;" and the process need only be reversed to prove that a staging necessary to erect or repair a "structure" must certainly be of such dimensions and character as to constitute a scaffold. Upon this branch of the case we can add practically nothing to the foregoing discussion. The same reasoning applies. The reports of decisions in the Appellate Division are full of cases in which the question has arisen in many forms, but they are of no use as authorities except where the facts are identical or so similar as to be controlling. The following cases disclose the wide range of things which the Appellate Division have held to be scaffolds within the statute:Madden v. Hughes (
When we turn to the lexicographers we find nothing much more definite. We all accept the definition that a scaffold is "a temporary structure of timber, boards, etc., for various purposes, as for supporting workmen and materials in building." (Webster's International Dict.) But when that is *423
admitted we may still differ as to the height and other dimensions which mark the difference between a scaffold and a platform or staging. In Schapp v. Bloomer (
The order of the Appellate Division should, therefore, be affirmed, and judgment absolute is ordered for the plaintiff upon defendant's stipulation, with costs to the plaintiff in all courts.
GRAY, VANN, WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur; CULLEN, Ch. J., absent.
Order affirmed, etc.