131 N.Y.S. 148 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
The plaintiff’s recovery is for dainages occasioned by personal injuries alleged to have been sustained' by him while working in the employ of the defendant. The accident occurred on the 29th of May, 1909. The defendant was engaged at the time in doing certain work in connection with the construction of a subway under Centre street, in the borough of Manhattan.
In the prosecution of the work it employed structural iron workers, the plaintiff being an assistant foreman having several men under him whose work he directed. This gang was engaged at the time of the accident in placing iron beams in position, which beams were designed to form the roof of the subway, and in the work they were using a derrick which rested on planks placed on top of the subway, the derrick being moved along on iron rollers as the work progessed. ' The excavation for the subway was on the west side of Centre street, inside of the city sidewalk, and the roof of the subway, where the men were working, was four or five feet below. Running parallel with the subway on the side toward the building line and about two and one-half feet below the planks on which
At about two o’clock in the afternoon of May twenty-ninth, while the plaintiff and his gang were moving the derrick along the planks on which it rested, it chanced to lean in such a way that the plaintiff thought it was about to fall. He holloed to the men to stop in their work of moving it and jumped down on the runway. In so doing he jumped upon a nail or spike which had been driven up through the plank in such a manner that it protruded an inch or moré and entering his foot caused the injuries of which he complains. There was no evidence tending to indicate how long the nail had been in the plank, but the learned counsel for the respondent seeks to support the judgment récovered on the theory -that the thickness of the plank and the size and position of the nail, of themselves, tend to indicate that the plank had been used with the spike in it in some other construction work previous to the building of the runway, and -that it is to be inferred that the plank with the nail in it was used .in that condition at the time the platform or runway was built.
The law of negligence does not permit the defendant’s liability to rest upon inference merely. It must be established by proof. No circumstances were disclosed by the evidence showing the appearance of the nail or spike, or of the wood around it, from which a period of duration could be deduced. None of the many workmen had ever seen it, although the platform was in constant daily use; and, as the learned trial justice said in response to a request on the subject made by counsel for the respondent, “there is no evidence here as to how long it had been there.” Nevertheless he left it to the jury to determine, without such evidence, this controlling question, telling them, to quote his precise words: “You will have to form your own judgment from the testimony as to how long the nail had been in that position considering it was from the bottom of the plank projecting out to the top.”
The judgment and order must be reversed.
Jenks, P. J., Burr, Woodward and Rich, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order, reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.