58 N.Y.S. 110 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
This action to recover damages for personal injuries, caused to the plaintiff by the falling of an elevator, was originally brought against Thomas C. Lyman, the owner of a building in which the elevator was operated, and Baumann and Froehlich, his tenants. The complaint charged both the landlord and tenant with negligence, that of the former consisting, according to the allegations of the complaint, in neglecting to furnish'the plaintiff with reasonably safe and proper machinery for operating and running the elevator and in failing to ■employ skillful and competent engineers and servants to operate it, ■and by reason of his failure to give the plaintiff notice or warning that the elevator and engine attached thereto were in an unsafe and iinproper condition. The negligence attributed to Baumann and Froehlich, who were the plaintiff’s employers, according to the complaint, was in failing and neglecting to furnish the plaintiff with a reasonably safe and proper place in which to prosecute his work and in failing to give the plaintiff any notice or warning that the elevator in which the plaintiff was ordered to prosecute his work was in' an unsafe and improper condition, and by reason of the incompetencv of the servants and agents of the defendants Baumann and Froehlich. The plaintiff and seven or eight other men put upon the elevator a mass of material, and were being drawn up with it, when .the car fell and the plaintiff was injured.
On the trial, the plaintiff’s counsel in his opening to the jury stated facts upon which he relied to recover against both defend.ants. What he stated to the jury is set forth in full in the record. After the opening, a motion was made to dismiss .the complaint as to Mr. Lyman, which motion was granted, and the action of the ■court in so granting it presents the first question to be considered on this appeal.
Dismissals of complaints upon the opening of counsel are not to-be encouraged, but as Avas'said in Garrison v. McCullough (28 App. Div. 468), there are cases in which the court is no.t' only empowered to adopt that course, but such course is entirely proper. (Oscanyan v. Arms Company, 103 U. S. 261; Ward v. Jewett, 4 Robt. 714.) It would have been in this case a useless consumption of time to continue a trial against a defendant who could not by any possibility, be held liable on the proof to which counsel declared in substance he would coniine himself. The trial proceeded as to-the defendants Baumann and Froehlich, and upon the conclusion of the testimony offered by the plaintiff the complaint Avas dismissed as to them. It was shown that the overloading of the elevator caused the accident, and that that overloading was directéd -by one Hole, who was called a foreman, and who seems to have had diree
In this case there is no evidence as to improper or unsafe machinery or implements, or that IN ole was an unfit servant to employ in and about the elevator. In Slater v. Jewett (85 N. Y. 74) the rule laid down in Crispin v. Babbitt (supra) was reiterated, and it was again declared that if the act were something relating to the duty of an operative only, the employee, performing it was a mere servant ; and in Cullen v. Norton (126 N. Y. 1) it is said that the rule in Crispin v. Babbitt remains in full vigor and force. That rule is again stated in Hankins v. N. Y., L. E & W. R. R. Co. (142 N. Y. 420).
In the case at bar, the master's duty was to provide a proper elevator — one that would be safe with proper and reasonable use. That, duty was performed. Further, there-is nothing to show that
As was remarked in Cullen v. Norton (supra), the manner of the performance of each of the various details of work by which, as a whole, the work is to be. carried on, rests necessarily on the intelligence and care and fidelity of the servants to whom those details are intrusted; and this accident was connected with “a.detail of the working or management of the business, the risks attending which have been assumed by the party taking employment.”
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Yan Brunt, P. J., Barrett, -Rumsey and O’Brien, J J., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.