108 N.Y.S. 686 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
Lead Opinion
This is a statutory action
On the 27th day of June, 1905, the decedent was in the employ of the defendant, the Rapid Transit Subway Construction Company, and died from injuries received while riding on a flat car through the westerly tube of the Interborough tunnel, so called^ under the Harlem river. A reel upon which cable was wound was on the flat car on which he was riding, and was tipped over through the car striking a ladder resting upon the track, and precipitating it against an empty cable reel on the ground near the track, which was thereby moved into contact with the car. This appellant was engaged in the performance of the work ■ of installing the cables for conveying the electric current in the septum between the two . tubes of the tunnel under a contract with decedent’s employer. Each subway track was constructed, in a steel tube fifteen feet six inches in height and fourteen feet in width. The tubes were parallel, and side by side, and are described as like the barrels of a double-barrel shot gun. In the septum, and toward the top of the tubes, there were conduits for the cables. At the southerly end of the tube an employee of the cable company was in charge of a winch, used for drawing the cables through from the northerly end, and he testified that he - had there placed a red lantern on a raised platform, about two feet and a half above the ground between the tracks, to indicate that Ins company was at work in the tunnel. The tubes were about 640 feet in length. At the northerly end of the tubes employees of the appellant were preparing to pass the cables through, and in the westerly tube, within a few feet of the northerly end of it, they had jdaced a ladder with the lower end resting against the easterly rail of the south-bound track which had .already, been constructed in the tube, and the upper end resting against the septum. An empty reel lay upon the ground at the east side of the track and within a few feet of the- ladder. The employees of the appellant were preparing to extend a plank from the ladder to the empty reel upon which men might stand to assist
Testimony was given by two employees of the Subway Construction Company that they had passed through the tunnel about twenty
We think the charge was erroneous and did not fairly present to the jury the conditions upon which the liability of the appellant could properly be predicated. The error was not cured by the further charge at the request of the appellant that its employees had
• It follows that the judgment and order should be reversed and- a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant .to abide the. event.
Patterson, P. J., M.cLaugheiN and Houghton, JJ., concurred.
See Code Civ. Proc. § 1902 et seq.—[Rep.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur, in the reversal of this judgment, because I do not think that the evidence justified a. verdict that the defendant or its employees were negligent The tunnel was not in operation except for the transportation of material used in! the construction, of the
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.