58 N.Y.S. 628 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
The plaintiff was injured by having his leg caught between an iron girder (which the defendant was engaged in moving) and a pile •of stone, and brings this action to recover damages therefor, insisting that the act of the defendant constituted a negligent violation •of his rights, on account of which he is entitled to recover damages.
While the record is somewhat voluminous, yet the essential facts from which the rights and liabilities of the parties are to be determined are in a very narrow compass. Such as are necessary to the
In June, 1896, the wharf and warehouse company began the construction of a railroad terminus in its yard, upon this property, embracing that portion of the same where the accident took place. In connection with such improvement it entered into a contract with the defendant to construct and place thereon a steel float bridge for the purpose of enabling it to take cars and freight from vessels lying at the wharf and for the delivery of merchandise thereto. The contract for the construction of the terminus was let to one McLean, a contractor, and he entered upon the premises, tore up the dock to a considerable extent, drove piling therein, placed building material thereon — consisting of iron rails, frogs, and a pile of broken stone •— permanently interrupting the use of this portion of the dock by the general public. During the course of the work thereon the general public were excluded, and barriers were erected in the form of planks laid across barrels at either end of the space where the work of construction was being prosecuted. These planks and barrels were removed from time to time, sometimes by workmen engaged on the work, .and sometimes by third persons who appropriated them to their own use and carried them away, and the place was in fact more or less used by the public. The southerly side of the property upon which the improvement was made opened upon Montague street, a public thoroughfare; it extended northerly for a distance of at least 100 feet, and north from the last-named point
In August, 1896, the defendant obtained permission from the wharf and warehouse company to unload upon this property the material necessary to be used in the construction of the bridge, and included in the material so unloaded was an iron girder weighing thirty-six tons. This girder was unloaded on August sixteenth, from a lighter, upon the property, and the process of removal to the place it was to occupy was immediately begun, and was continued during that day, Sunday, and also the next day. In its removal rails, crowbars, jacks, winches and other implements were required to be used. On Monday afternoon, at four o’clock, this girder lay across this property, one end being within two feet of the stores thereon located, and the other end separated from the stone pile placed thereon by the wharf and warehouse company by a distance of about four feet. Part of the girder was then resting upon rollers, and part was jacked up from eighteen inches to two feet. Tackle was attached to it, connecting with a winch, and a large party of workmen were engaged about it.
The plaintiff was employed by the United States government osa weigher, and such had been his occupation during the whole time in which the improvement was being prosecuted. He was entirely familiar with the dock and its then present condition. His employment was in the Mediterranean Stores, lying some little distance north of this property; his day’s work ceased at four o’clock in the afternoon. In order to reach his abode he had the choice of two routes, one through a passageway under the stores fronting on the open space of the docks, about eighteen feet in width, leading to a public street. This was used by vehicles and pedestrians as often as necessity and occasion required. With this route the plaintiff was familiar. The evidence tended to establish that there was some danger in its use by pedestrians, on account of its narrow width, and the presence of trucks and other vehicles therein. The other route was along the dock, over the portion of the incumbered place, and past where the iron girder lay, to Montague street. The plaintiff on this Monday afternoon was accompanied by three companions, engaged in the same occupation as himself. They passed along the dock, and came to the place where the girder lay, near
The question submitted to the jury from which they might find the defendant negligent, while not entirely clear, seems to have embraced two propositions — was it requisite that notice should be given that the girder was about to be moved, and was the manner of its movement careless % This brings us to a consideration of what the plaintiff’s right was at this place, and to arrive at this we must consider the nature of the defendant’s obligation to him. The defendant had the right to make use of the dock for the very purpose of doing what it was at the time engaged in doing. This being private property, and the condition of the dock being such as to indicate that the public right of use was interrupted, the obligation of the defendant was quite different from what it would have been had the work been prosecuted in a public street. In the latter case reasonable care is required to be observed, and as this is to be determined by the surroundings, when the use is of a public place, great precaution is necessary to meet the requirement, and in the absence of notice of the particular danger to be encountered, the rule of res ijpsa logxoitur applies. (Hogan v. Manhattan R. Co., 149 N. Y. 23; Reed v. McCord, 18 App. Div. 381.) In the former case the prosecution of the work is the exercise of a legal right, and while under ordinary conditions the plaintiff would be considered as being upon the dock under an implied invitation from the owner, and consequently entitled to protection, so far as the exercise of reasonable care by defendant would insure the same, yet the disarranged condition of the dock, and the character of the work being prosecuted thereon, exclude the implication of an invitation to the plaintiff to come thereon, and under such circumstances no duty was imposed to take affirmative steps to guard from danger persons who trespass thereon or who are there by sufferance. (Victory v. Baker, 67 N. Y. 366 ; Flannigan v. The American Glucose Co., v. 38 N. Y. St. Repr. 867; McAlpin v. Powell, 70 N. Y. 126.) The plaintiff’s right, therefore, was to be protected from wanton and willful injury; beyond this the defendant owed him no obligation.
There is not even plausible pretext for saying that in anything which the defendant did it was guilty of a wanton act or of a willful intent to inflict injury. It was required by its contract with the wharf and warehouse company to expedite the work with all dispatch, and there is not a scintilla of evidence which tends to establish that, in the manner and method of the movement of the girder, the defendant did not adopt the usual means and take the usual precautions for the prosecution of such work. It is not contended but that it was proper to place it upon the rollers, to jack it up, to move it with the winch and to let it down so that it might slide on to the rails prepared for that purpose, in precisely the manner adopted by the defendant at the time the injury was inflicted. There was, therefore, no reasonable basis upon which the court was authorized to submit, and the jury to find, that' the defendant was guilty of negligence in anything which it did. The plaintiff was perfectly well informed of the surroundings; he knew of the torn-up condition of the dock; he saw, or ought to have seen, what was plainly visible and what his companions saw, and he knew, or was chargeable with knowledge, that the girder, when he passed it, was liable to be moved at any time. It rested upon rollers, was raised up, and men stood about it, at work upon it. The plaintiff states: “ There were plenty of men there near the girder; * * * I did not look to see if there were men about to move this girder before I ventured in there; ” and although he subsequently testified that he looked before going into the space, and did not see any one moving or about to move the girder, yet it is quite apparent that such condition was open and visible. His companion, Fitzgerald, testified to the condition as it was, and also stated: “ I knew that it (the girder) was liable to be moved as quick as they could get it out of the way; I went in there and took that chance.” Other witnesses called by the plaintiff testified expressly to the condition of the girder and the active efforts being made to move it at the time when the plaintiff attempted passage between it and the stone pile. It was in fact then being worked upon by the workmen, and it was intentionally moved by them at the time when it did move, and all who made any observation of the surroundings
Upon the practically undisputed testimony in the case the coui’t should have directed a verdict in favor of the defendant.
It follows that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted.
All concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.