32 N.Y.S. 59 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
The evidence was quite sufficient to have authorized the jury to find that the plaintiff was injured by a brick which fell from defendants’ scaffold. Connelly, one of defendants’ serv.ants, who was engaged at the time in removing bricks from the lower to the upper platform of the scaffold, testified:
“Q. Do you remember how the accident happened to Mr. Dohn? A. I remember that there was a brick rolled off somewhere or another, but I can’t say whether it came off the scaffold, or where it came off, to be certain, "but the brick rolled off, and we looked through the window, and I saw a man had his hand on his head. At the time I did not know who it was.
*60 * * * Q. How did this brick escape? A. I can’t tell you. Q. Did it escape from your hand? A. No; it did not escape from my hand, as I remember-of. I was upon the scaffold, and it was all right, that I could see, and it may have dropped from the pile of bricks up above. There was naturally a few bricks one side, and you couldn’t very well see where you are putting them; and it may have rolled off that heap, and out of my hand. T can’t tell. Q. Did you hear a brick clattering down the side of the building?A. Yes; we heard it rattling somewhere. I couldn’t see. Q. Was there any one else on the platform, and who was he? A. Peter Judge. Q. Was there any one else but you two there? A. No; not as I can recollect. Q. Was-there nobody else handling brick except yourself? A. No; but myself and this other man. Q. When you heard the brick clattering down the side of the building, did you hear it strike the window sill?. A. I heard it strike against something, but I cannot tell what it was. Q. And did you then run to see whether you had caused any damage? A. I had just about three feet to go to look outside, and I could not see whether the brick dropped or not, but I saw a man had his hand on his head, and I thought from that there was somebody hurt. Q. (indicating). Do you identify this as the man who-was struck? A. Yes. Q. The plaintiff, Mr. Dohn? A. Yes.”
Garrity testified that he saw the brick fall from above, and strike the plaintiff. He said he did not sée the brick at the moment it hit the plaintiff, but saw it before it struck the sidewalk, and picked it up. There is other evidence corroborating Connelly and Garrity which renders it highly probable, if not certain, that the plaintiff" was injured by a brick which fell from defendants’ scaffold, and through the opening for a window.
The next question presented is, was there sufficient evidence of' want of care by defendants to sustain a finding that the brick fell by reason of their negligence? The principal grounds for imputing negligence to them are: (1) Their failure to maintain scaffolding or platforms outside of the exterior wall of the building on Franklin street, or other guards, so as to protect persons lawfully on the sidewalk from being injured by falling material; (2) in removing bricks-in the manner described from the lower to the upper platform, without closing the opening for a window so as to prevent the bricks from falling through the opening and into the street. In case a wall of masonry for a building is being constructed contiguous to the sidewalk of a public street in a large city, and it is proved that material falls therefrom or from a scaffold and injures one lawfully on the sidewalk, coupled with proof that the sidewalk was not covered with platforms, barricaded, or in any wise guarded, it is sufficient to raise a presumption that the builder was negligent. Jager v. Adams, 123 Mass. 26; Clare v. Bank, 1 Sweeney, 539; Eccles v. Darragh, 48 N. Y. Super. Ct. 528; 2 Shear. & R. Neg. (4th Ed.) 361; 1 Thomp. Neg. p. 347, § 10; Cooley, Torts, 607; Bish. Noncont. Law, 440; Elliott, Roads & S. 546. In Pearson v. Cox, 2 C. P. Div. 369, and Vanderpool v. Husson, 28 Barb. 196, the defendants were held, not liable for the falling of material, but it was upon the ground that the workmen who were negligent were the employés of a subcontractor, and not of the defendants. It was assumed in both cases-that, if the master of the workmen had been sued, he would have been liable. The rule above declared is necessary for the protection of' those having occasion to use the sidewalks of public streets. The' evidence as to how the accident occurred is most usually wholly