25 N.Y.S. 509 | New York City Court | 1893
Plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for the loss of services of his son, Edward F. Evans, resulting from injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant, in whose employ said son was at the time. Plaintiff complained that the alleged negligence consisted in placing his son in a position of danger, in not providing him with a safe place to work, and in failing to warn him of danger. Plaintiff had a verdict, and defendant appeals-from the judgment entered thereon, and from the order denying motion for a new trial.
Plaintiff’s son was the only witness on behalf of the plaintiff as to the happening of the injuries which he received. It appeared from his evidence that he was fifteen years of age, and that he had been in the employ of the defendant for about three months prior to the date of the accident. Defendant’s business was the manufacture of iron tanks, and plaintiff’s son was employed to heat rivits, and also to run errands. At the time of the accident, defendant was engaged in putting together ¡an iron tank, some fifty or sixty feet long, and twelve or fourteen -feet wide, and about four feet high, on the second floor of a building which was in process of erection on Washington street, New York, for the New York Steam Company, to be used for refrigerating purposes. Carpenters and masons were at work on the building at the time, and the roof had not yet been put on; there were no stairways in the building, and the only means of getting from one floor to another was through a sort of hatchway between two and three feet square, by means of iron rungs built into the wall, thus forming a ladder. Plaintiff’s son had been working in this building about three weeks prior to the accident. On the day of the accident, his forge would not work, and he says that the foreman in charge told him to go up on the fourth floor, where the flooring was then being laid, and get an oil
At the close of the plaintiff’s case defendant’s counsel moved to dismiss the complaint, which motion was denied, and an exception thereto was taken.
After a very careful examination we have come to the conclusion that the learned trial judge erred in denying the motion to dismiss the complaint. We fail to see wherein the defendant was negligent. The fact that plaintiff’s son was set to work in an unfinished building was certainly not a negligent act on defendant’s part; that there was a chance that some of the other workmen on the building, not under defendant’s control, might accidentally, or even carelessly, drop some object from the upper floors was an incident almost inseparable from the erection of a large building, and was, we think, one of the risks incident to the employment of this lad at the building; it was also a patent risk, one of which plaintiff’s son was well aware, for he testified, as before stated, that he had been fully warned of the dangers lurking around this hatchway, and the chance of his getting hurt there, and he was of sufficient age and intelligence to appreciate the risk.
There is an entire lack of evidence as. to how the substance which struck plaintiff’s son came to fall, or who was responsible for its falling. Certainly, there is no proof that it was due to the negligence of the defendant or any of its servants, and, in the absence of such proof, there was nothing on which to base a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. Wall v. Jones, 45 N. Y. St. Repr. 687. The case of Ford v. Lyons, 41 Hun, 512, cited by the learned counsel for the respondent, is not in point; in that case, plaintiff’s intestate was set to work in the cellar, in a place where broken pieces of brick fell from the upper portion of the building, where defendant had full control of the erection, and complaint had been made as to the insüíñcient protection of the covering of the men at work in the cellar; there it was clearly a case where the actual place of work was unsafe.
For the reasons stated, we think that the exception to the denial of the motion to dismiss the complaint was well taken. Having come to this conclusion, it is unnecessary for us to discuss any of the other exceptions in the case.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event.
Clement, Ch. J., concurs.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered.