66 N.Y.S. 1118 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The complaint alleged that the defendant was the owner of a building on Fifteenth street, in the borough of Manhattan; that the plaintiff was a bricklayer working in the cellar in constructing a pier with the permission of the defendant; that above the place where the plaintiff was working was a covering of stone, which, through the defendant’s negligence, was dangerous and unsafe, and known to defendant to be so; and that by reason of defendant’s negligence the covering collapsed, and fell upon the plaintiff. At the opening" of the trial the defendant moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that it failed to state a cause of action, and the motion was denied. At the close of the plaintiff’s case the defendant again moved to dismiss the complaint. The court granted the motion, and the plaintiff appeals.
The evidence showed that the plaintiff was in the employ of John Batten, who had a contract for putting up the brickwork of the building. Batten was also doing as extra work the excavation of the cellar and digging out a place for the foundation of a wall to be built under an arch covering a vault which was under the sidewalk and outside of the building. The defendant gave Batten five dollars to pay for this last-mentioned work. At the time of the accident the foundation of the front wall had been started. The inner spring of the arch had been shored up on jackscrews, and there was a space between it and the area wall upon which the plaintiff was at work. The plaintiff was sent to work at the place where the accident happened, not by the defendant, but by Samuel Batten, foreman for his brother, John. He had been at work only a few minutes when the arch fell upon him. It appeared that some work had been done at the place in question by a colored man named Dan in taking-down a wall, and there was some evidence tending to show that his work had weakened the' support of the arch; but there is no evidence as to the relation of Dan to the defendant except that he had been working two or three days, and that the defendant saw him working there. The only other evidence is that of Samuel Batten, who testified: “Q. Did you see anybody removing the old wall, the vault? If so, who removed it? A. A colored man belonging to Mr. Pugh, I think. His name was Dan.” This was not sufficient to raise a presumption that Dan was in the employment of the defendant. He might have been there in the employment of any other ■contractor on the building, or as an independent contractor, and it would not have been proper to permit the jury to speculate and find on such slight evidence that he was in the employ of the defendant. This position is emphasized by the fact that at the close of the evidence the attention of plaintiff’s counsel was called to the fact that he had failed to show any connection between Mr. Pugh and the colored man, except by the statement of one witness that the colored man belonged to Mr. Pugh. There was no attempt to supply the
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs. All concur.