23 N.Y.S. 1076 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
This action was commenced on the 21st day of June, 1892, to recover damages for injuries which the plaintiff alleges in his complaint he sustained by falling into a hole in the rolling mill of the defendants, in the city of Cohoes, Albany county, on or about the 5th day of January, 1892. It is alleged in the complaint that the plaintiff went into the mill on said occasion at the request and suggestion of one of the foremen or managing workmen of the defendant, in the daytime, for a legal and proper purpose, and while so upon the premises he fell as aforesaid, and charges that the accident occurred, and was caused, by the carelessness and negligence of the defendants, in allowing the hole to remain unprotected and unguarded. All the allegations of the complaint were put in issue by the defendants’ answer. Ontario county was designated as the place for the trial of- the action. The defendants moved, upon the pleadings, and the affidavit of E. N. Page, for an order changing the place of trial from Ontario to Albany county, for the convenience of witnesses. The affidavit contained all the formal requisites required for a change of venue.
If the accident happened on the 5th day of January, 1892, on the occasion when the plaintiff was at the works and met Joseph Eavenscroft, and he fell into the hole described in Page’s affidavit, or if the admissions mentioned in the affidavit, as made by the plaintiff, were a trite recital of what happened at the time of the accident, in either case the plaintiff has no legal cause of action against the defendants, and the trial must inevitably result in a dismissal of his complaint; and there is no justice or propriety in requiring the defendants to attend court at Canandaigua, with their counsel, to go through the formality of dismissing the complaint. But if, on the other hand, the plaintiff has an undisclosed purpose of fixing the time and occasion of the accident on some other day than the 5th of January, as he would probably have the right to do, as it is alleged in his complaint that the accident happened on or about the 5th day of January, 1892, or, if he intends to claim that he was invited to enter the works by some other person than Joseph Eavenscroft, and on some other occasion, and intends to claim that the person who thus invited him was at the time of the accident a foreman or managing workman of the defendants, and that he fell into another or different hole than the one described in Page’s affidavit, in either such case it would be necessary and' important that the defendants should have their witnesses present at the trial to meet such an emergency. If . the plaintiff intends, notwithstanding his stipulation, to bring his cause to trial, the defendants would not deem it safe to rely upon the stipulation as their only defense. If, after making such broad and sweeping admissions, which apparently negative the existence of any claim upon his part against the defendants, the plaintiff still insists upon going to trial, he manifestly must rely upon some facts or theory not apparent to the defendants, and which we are