34 N.Y.S. 379 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
The action is brought to recover damages for injuries due to negligence. The plaintiff, a roofer by trade, was at work on a cornice over a liquor store at the corner of Twenty-Third street and Third avenue in the city of New York, which was owned, as were the premises, by one. McCaffrey. There was, upon the south end of the cornice, an iron box, a converter or transformer, used to change a high-tension electrical current pf 1,000 volts to a low-tension current, maintained and operated bv the defendant. The cornice was 2 feet 2 inches wide, and the distance between the converter and the wall was 14£ inches. The space between the converter and the westerly edge of the cornice was If inches. The converter was connected by wires to a cable in a standpipe coming, up from the street at the south end of the cornice. Those wires were joined from the standpipe to two fuse boxes upon the top of the converter, the primary wires hanging between the converter and the wall of the house. The plaintiff was on his knees, facing south, and had in his hand a small whisk broom, with which he was sweeping the tin roof around the northeast comer of the converter. He received a shock, and became unconscious. He was found with his clothes in flames, lying upon the wires between the converter and the wall. That his injuries were serious and justified the damages as reduced by the court is not disputed. Neither were exceptions taken to the admission or rejection of evidence, nor to the judge’s charge, the defendant urging upon this appeal questions relating to the merits of plaintiff’s cause of action, which are presented by his motion to dismiss the complaint at the close of the plaintiff’s case, and after the verdict by the motion for a new trial, upon the ground, among others, that such verdict was against the weight of evidence.
The first question therefore is, had the plaintiff, when he rested, made out a prima facie case of negligence? It appeared that the wires which caused the damage were exposed to contact by any one who went to the south end of the cornice, and that they were in front of a window, between the wall of the building and the converter, and this arrangement of the box and wires was characterized, by an electrician who went to the place of the accident, as improper. The evidence also tended to show that the wires were improperly insulated, the insulation having worn off in five places on the primary wires; that at one point there was a bad splice, entirely uninsulated; and that the defective insulations were old. Such evidence, we think, made out a prima facie case of negligence, because it tended to support two grounds relied on by the plaintiff, viz. that
“The defendant was not maintaining a nuisance. Its business was lawful, and in its conduct the law does not impose the obligation of saving harmless others from the consequences resulting from the occurrence of inevitable accident, but rather burdens it simply with the duty of using reasonable care and caution to save others from injury.”
There being no evidence of negligence, except such as it was insisted should be presumed from the proof of the explosion, it was held that such proof was not sufficient to authorize an inference of negligence, and for that reason it was error not to have granted the motion for a nonsuit.
It is claimed, however, that in view of the testimony given by the defendant the motion for a new trial should have been granted, upon the ground that the verdict was against the weight of evidence. We have examined the record, and while it is true the witnesses for the defendant outnumbered those for the plaintiff, we do not think the weight of evidence so clearly preponderated in defendant’s favor that the court would have been justified in granting the motion for a new trial. If anything, the plaintiff’s case was strengthened by the showing that a change was made in the manner of construction between the time of the accident and the trial; and upon cross-examination of defendant’s expert as to the relative safety of the two modes of construction, such evidence tended to show that the present construction is safer than that which existed at the time of the accident. We think, therefore, that the question as to
A further question is presented, considering the nature of the accident, whether, merely from its happening, a presumption of negligence did not arise. As said in Breen v. Railroad Co., 109 N. Y. 300, 16 N. E. 60:
“There must be reasonable evidence of negligence, but when the thing causing the injury is shown to be under the control of a defendant, and the accident is such as in the ordinary course of business does not happen if reasonable care is used, it does, in the absence of explanation by the defendant, afford sufficient evidence that the accident arose from want of care on its part.”
And, as said in Millie v. Railway Co., 5 Misc. Rep. 301, 25 N. Y. Supp. 753:
“Since every man is presumed to discharge his duty, it results that whoever asserts negligence in another must prove the fact, and must prove it by a preponderance of evidence. But there are cases in which the maxim ‘res ipsa loquitur’ applies,—that is to say, in which the very occurrence itself imports negligence. The specific question here is whether the occurrence in controversy carries with it an imputation of negligence against the defendant with the effect of imposing upon the appellant the burden of repelling this prima facie presumption of negligence.”
So here we might ask whether the happening of this accident does not carry with it an imputation of negligence, it being self-evident that, if the wires had been properly insulated, it would not have occurred, and it being equally clear that with the exercise of ordinary care defective insulation could be avoided. It is unnecessary for us, however, to decide that .the rule of “res ipsa loquitur” applies, and we do not therefore put our decision on this ground, because, as we have already pointed out, the plaintiff assumed the burden of establishing the negligence of the defendant, and in that connection presented evidence from which the jury properly could infer that the position and manner of construction of the wiring and the electrical converter were improper, and that in five places the wire was imperfectly insulated, and bore evidence of having been in that condition for some time. If, therefore, we apply the rule most favorable to the defendant, that “in order that liability shall attach for an injury occasioned by something not inherently dangerous and defective, which is found upon the grounds of, or in use by, one who is under a qualified obligation to the injured person, it must be shown that the defendant either knew, or that, by the exercise of such reasonable skill, vigilance, and sagacity as are ordinarily possessed and employed by persons experienced in the particular business to which the thing pertains, he should have known, of its defective and dangerous condition, and that the natural and probable consequence of its use would be to produce injury to some one,” then, under this rule, we think a case was made out for the jury.
The only other ground relied upon by the defendant is that the plaintiff by his own negligence contributed to the injury. The ques