58 A.D. 298 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
This action was brought to recover damages for injuries sustained by the infant plaintiff under the following circumstances: The defendant was a contractor employed by the city of Hew York to construct a sewer in Longwood avenue, a highway projected but not completed in the extreme northern part of the city of Hew York. In excavating a trench in which the sewer was to be laid, the defendant made use of a machine or apparatus known as a winch, by which fragments of stone were lifted from the excavation to the. surface of the land. This apparatus consisted of a framework in which was a drum. There was a cable attached to the drum and a boom or sweep was fastened to the upper end of the drum. In lifting stone from the trench, a horse was hitched to- the boom or sweep and by the process of winding the cable around the drum the stone to which one end of the cable was fastened was brought to the surface. On September 22, 1896, at about half-past five o’clock in the afternoon, the infant plaintiff saw some boys playing with this apparatus. The boom or sweep was attached to the drum and in place and boys were pushing the boom thus causing the drum to revolve and the cable to wind around it. The defendant’s workmen had been using the machine until after five o’clock; when they
The complaint specifically charges that the apparatus had been wrongfully and unlawfully left by the defendant. unguarded, unattended and exposed and without the exercise by the defendant . of ordinary care, and that it was at the time of the accident in its then condition a dangerous and unsafe machine for children of tender years to be permitted and given the opportunity, facility and occasion to handle or meddle with,.and that the same was, as the defendant knew or had reason to know, to the public using the thoroughfare,- a dangerous' and unlawful nuisance in the manner and respect alleged, and especially .to children of tender years (including the plaintiff), when near or upon said machine when set in motion and tliat ■“ .said nuisance was wrongfully and unlawfully created, caused, permitted and maintained by the defendant.” There are further allegations in the complaint to- the effect that through the unlawful and wrongful allowance, opportunity and facility afforded to - children .of tender years, easily to set the machine in motion, it became peculiarly dangerous, unsafe and a menace to children of tender years, by reason of the condition in which it was left, and that it .constituted a temptation or allurement, or attraction and inducement to such children to play with it, there being no-notice or warning ,at any time given' to the plaintiff or other children that it was unsafe and dangerous when set in motion. The plaintiff asked-to go to the jury on an issue of negligence and that: request was denied.
An analysis of the complaint shows that the" cause of action alleged is in nuisance. It is- distinctly set forth that.the apparatus was an unlawful obstruction in -the street and every allegation of" carelessness contained in the complaint- is connected with such alleged unlawfulness. Thát the winch -did not in itself constitute a, nuisance must be conceded. There is nothing to show that it was not an appliance, appropriate -to the use to which it was put
The complaint was properly dismissed and the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., and Rumsey, J., concurred; O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ.,'concurred in result.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.