115 N.Y.S. 327 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
The plaintiff, an-employee-of the defendant, was injured by the collapse- of a scaffold,, and brings this action- to .recover damages because of the alleged negligence of the defendant. His complaint
The scaffold stood on a floor of a building which defendant was constructing for a pulp or paper mill. The top of the scaffold was about seven feet from such floor and a few feet underneath the rafters of the building. The purpose of the scaffold was to enable the workmen to fasten to the rafters crossbeams from which would be suspended the shafting of the machinery to be placed in the milh The floor of the scaffold consisted of planks sixteen feet long resting on two timbers thirteen feet long, one at each end of the planks. Each of those two timbers was supported at either end thereof by a device termed in mechanical nomenclature a “jack,” there being, therefore, one of these jacks at each corner of the scaffold. These jacks were ready-made and portable contrivances designed to act as supports for scaffolds wherever they could be utilized for that purpose, but were not designed to support very heavy weights. ' They were in shape like a capital letter “ A,” the legs thereof approaching each other at the top, where they clamped the connecting timbers above mentioned, which they supported, and on which timbers the floor of the scaffold was placed. There was also a brace extending from each jack diagonally upwards to such connecting timber and clamping thereto. These clamps were tightened and adjusted by means of thumb screws. The scaffold had been constructed the day before the accident by carpenters in the employment of the, defendant. Plaintiff was a common laborer, and had nothing to do With its construction, and so far as the evidence shows, was unaware of its insecurity.
At the time of the accident plaintiff had been directed to go upon the scaffold and assist in fastening said beams to the rafters. Such beams were then upon the scaffold, and there were also two men thereon and various material. The jury might have found from the evidence that the jacks were at that time supporting a load of nearly a ton. As plaintiff approached the scaffold it collapsed. One of the witnesses, who was on the scaffold when it fell, testified that he saw the clamp which connected one of the diagonal braces with the timber to which it was attached sliding along the timber. Evidently the thumb screw did not hold the clamp with sufficient firmness to the timber to withstand the weight on the jacks. It also appears
Independently of statutory provisions a prima facie case of negligence against defendant-was established. At common- law, if a servant constructed a platform according to his own judgment, the master was not liable for the manner of such construction,- providing he had furnished suitable materials therefor. (Kimmer v. Weber, 151 N. Y. 417.) The duty, however, rested on the master to furnish proper and safe material for the construction thereof. (Madden v. Hughes, 185 N. Y. 466, 470; Richards v. Hayes, 17 App. Div. 422.) The plaintiff produced evidence to the effect that these jacks were not suitable for heavy work, such as that to which they were being applied, and that they were insufficient to sustain in safety such a load as, was superimposed upon them at the time of the accident. From this' evidence the jury might have found that the defendant failed in its duty toward its employees in providing unsuitable, weak and insufficient materials or instrumentalities for the construction of the scaffold. . The jacks were provided by the defendant for use in the construction of this scaffold. There Is no question but what in so using them the carpenters who constructed .the scaffold were fulfilling the purpose of the defendant, and us.ing the means and methods which it had provided and indicated for that purpose. It is true the- jacks did not break, but one of them slid out from under its load because the thumbscrew pressure, was insufficient to hold in place the diagonal brace when the jack was not placed vertically. But their tendency to do so was what rendered .them unsuitable for that -kind of work, and the defendant was negligent in furnishing that kind of an unsafe and unsuitable device or appliance for the construction of the scaffold in the same manner as it would have been liable had it furnished weak or insufficient timber or planking or other material'. (Richards v. Hayes, supra.)
If there was- negligence on .the part of plaintiff’s fellow-servants in not' properly adjusting the' jacks such negligence on their part avails the defendant nothing. The rule on this point is-stated as follows in Stringham v. Stewart (100 N. Y. 516): “ Co-operation ,-of the negligence, of the master and a co-servant in the production of an-injury to an -employe, does not excuse the master from lia
I think also that the court erroneously excluded evidence offered for the purpose of showing that thumb screws used as in this case and under circumstances here appearing for the purpose of tightening the jacks to the connecting timbers would gradually become loose and fail to accomplish their purpose. The object of the testimony was to explain and indicate more fully the weakness of the scaffold.
It follows that the judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
All concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.