122 N.Y.S. 576 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
The defendant appeals from a judgment, entered upon a verdict of a jury, for damages for personal injuries to the plaintiff. The
Where one renders aid to the servant of_ another at the request of the servant, and under circumstances which create a necessity for aid, it has been held that the person rendering aid becomes an
It should be noted, however, that the portion of the opinion just quoted was not necessary to the decision, because that court had also held that, if the position-in which the boy was placed was one of inherent danger of which the boy was ignorant, it would have been negligence to have put him there without a warning, and such questions were for the jury, whether the lad was an “ emergency employee ” or not, for this was a part of the master’s duty to a lad of tender years and no experience.
Another phase of the same question was before this court, quite recently, in Fiesel v. New York Edison Co. (123 App. Div. 676), in- which the rule was declared as follows: “An emergency employe, -called on by another employe to assist him, for however short a time, becomes a fellow-servant, and subject to the rules of law applicable to the injury of a servant by his fellow. But he must be so called on as of necessity in order to make him an employe, for a servant has no authority to call on another to help him in his master’s business as of necessity unless the necessity exists. If he can do the work himself, there is no occasion of necessity to imply power in him to employ assistance.”
In the case at bar the work of the express messenger was to unload a package weighing 385 pounds, and the necessity of securing aid was apparent. At the close of the plaintiff’s case at the trial a motion was made to dismiss on various grounds, including a specified one that the negligence of the express agent was that of a fellow-servant. The appellant now' claims that the • denial of this motion was error and that his exception thereto presents a controlling reason for reversal. The same motion was renewed at. the close of the whole ease and denied, and an exception taken to the denial. Assuming that the motion to dismiss at the close of the plaintiff’s case was denied improperly, yet if any defect in the plaintiff’s proof was thereafter supplied by the defendant, such evidence may be considered to affirm the judgment. (Commercial Bank of Keokuk v. Pfeiffer, 108 N. Y. 242, 252; Painton v. Northern Central R. Co., 83 id. 7; Tiffany v. St. John, 65 id. 314, 317.)
In the case at bar the plaintiff pleaded and gave proof of a cause of action upon which he was not entitled to recover against the
We think that a judgment thus obtained should not be upheld.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Jenics, Burr, Thomas and Rich, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.