112 N.Y.S. 522 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
This action was brought to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff through the alleged negligence of the defendants, the action being dismissed as against the defendant the Columbia Engineering Works upon the trial. The plaintiff in 1904 was an office boy in the employ of the Columbia Engineering Works, which company was engaged in making repairs upon a tugboat said to belong to or to be in the control of the defendant the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company; The tugboat was tied up to the dock of the Columbia Engineering Works, and there was evidence from which the jury might draw the inference that this boat was in the charge of its regular engineer, and that the repairs which were being made by the Columbia Engineering Works were made under the direction of some one representing the defendant railroad company. The work had been in progress some considerable length of time when the plaiiitiff was sent by the foreman of the Columbia Engineering Works to get a pump which Was used for pumping the water out of the hold of vessels. The pump was in the engine room of the tugboat which was undergoing repairs, and the plaintiff, while thus engaged, stepped upon the covering of a manhole, which turned up on its edge and the plaintiff fell astride of it in such a manner as to produce serious and more or less permanent injuries. The jury found a verdict against the defendant railroad company for $7,500; the defendant appealing from the judgment entered upon such verdict and from the order denying a motion for a new trial;
The defendant contends upon this appeal that there is no evidence that at the time - of the accident the boat on which the accident occurred was owned by the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company. The defendant put in evidence a bill of sale Of a boat known as the Mercedes to the Lehigh Valley Transportation Company, and it was claimed that this was the boat on which the accident occurred, and it is insisted that this ownership in the Lehigh Valley Transportation Company having been shown, the ownership must be pre- ■ sumed to continue until the contrary is shown. This would, no doubt, be the rule if it was once conclusively established that such ownership existed. But in the case now before us the boat described in the bill of sale does not conclusively appear to be the
It is suggested, however, that the plaintiff was a mere licensee, and that the defendant railroad company owed him no higher duty than to refrain from wantonly injuring him. We are of opinion that this proposition is untenable. The ColumbiaEngineering Works with its employees was invited upon the boat for the purpose of making repairs. It was not necessary that there should be an invitation to the plaintiff particularly; he was employed by the company making the repairs, and he was invited there, in common with other employees of the company, on any lawful mission con
We have examined the matters further urged upon the attention of this court, but without discovering reversible error. The ver diet, while of considerable amount, is not so far excessive as to warrant this court in interfering under the modern rule in such cases. There is some evidence that the injuries, which have been very painful, will be permanent in some measure at least. It is true that there is no evidencé of a permanent impairment of earning capacity, but injuries which must continue to demand surgical attention indefinitely are deserving of compensation, and the evidence in this case is that the plaintiff must be operated upon once or twice a year to preserve him from stricture.
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Present—Woodward, Jenks, Hooker, Gaynor and Miller, JJ.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.