87 N.Y.S. 219 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
The action is for breach of a master’s duty to his servant. The master is a manufacturer of cream of tartar. It used in the process a wooden tank twenty-two feet high and fourteen feet in diameter. Suspended in the center of the tank was a copper cylinder about two and one-half feet in diameter. Two steam pipes which ran through the cylinder ejected steam at the lower ends, and thereby both agitated and boiled the material put into the tank. Heat was also furnished by a coil of steam pipe at the bottom of the tank. The top of the cylinder was covered by a copper plate about three feet in diameter and eight feet in circumference, fastened down into the wooden top of the tank by wooden screws at intervals of about eight inches. In the center of this copper plate was a hole about six by eight inches, through which the said two steam pipes passed. This was left open for the steam to blow off. The tank was filled with a liquid, and, before and after the steam was turned on, workmen stood on top of the tank to shovel into the hole ground argol, which was placed on the top of the tank surrounding the hole. The tank was heated to the boiling point. The intestate, a ^grinder of argols, was asked on the day of the accident, by defendant’s foreman, to take the place of an absent shoveler and to aid Nelson, the other regular shoveler on the top of the tank. Shortly before the accident Nelson saw that some steam was escaping from the edge of the copper plate at one side of it. He called the attention of the foreman to it after closing down the steam. The foreman answered: “ To hell with it. * * * Go ahead.” The foreman took hold of the steam valve that lets in the steam, and Nelson and the intestate took up their shovels. It is clear enough that the foreman then turned on the steam. Almost immediately there was a leakage or explosion of steam or water. The copper plate tipped right up, and the steam and water shot out laterally under the copper plate, and burned the intestate so that he subsequently died.
The plaintiff insists that if the copper plate had been properly
The learned counsel for the appellant insists that the softness of the top of the wood does not figure in the case, for the reason that the accident was not due to the giving way of the wood, but to the fact that the screws of the plate were not driven down into the wood. There is some warrant for this contention in certain statements of the witness Nelson on cross-examination. But the witness had testified on the direct: “ The screws were not sticking up that much,but loose, so that the head of the screw was above the copper plate except on one side.” And he had corrected his statements on his redirect as follows: “ Those screws were above the copper plate when I looked at them, onereighth of an inch; xyou might say the head of the screw was standing on top of the — I didn’t mean to
I cannot agree with the learned counsel that the act of Poulson in turning on the steam was the sole cause of the accident. The master was bound to furnish a place reasonably safe under the usual conditions that attended when the shovelers were at work. The turning on of the steam was a usual circumstance. If the wood had been sound, and the plate sufficiently fastened, or perhaps if either of these, circumstances had appeared, presumably the turning on of the steam would have resulted in no accident, for that was but a usual act. If the plate did not hold under such circumstances can it be said that the ordinary act of turning the steam was the sole cause of the accident ? Could not the jury say that in any , event the defects in question were concurrent in the accident ? The learned counsel, while stating that "he can find no direct authority in this State for the proposition, contends that the master, after discovery, is entitled to a reasonable time to make repairs. So far as this proposition is in the ease, it may be said that the jury were entitled to find that the defendant ought, in the exercise of reasonable care, to have known sometime before this accident that the wooden top of the vat was rotten. But in any event, it surely is not the law that when the master is apprised of a defective place, he is not liable if he continues to offer it to the servant provided an accident happens before he can, with due diligence, make the place safe. I know of no such interval of immunity.
The appellant relies upon Koehler v. New York Steam Co. (84 App. Div. 221) for the proposition that if the fault of the master lay in inspection the master is not liable. Notwithstanding the language of the court in Byrnes v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co. (113 N. Y. 256) I am of opinion that under earlier and later authorities it is well settled that the master cannot absolve himself, ,so far as the duty of inspection is concerned, by showing that he provided for an inspection by servants generally competent, or that an inspection was made; or, in other words, that the negligence of a servant competent to inspect, and intrusted with the duty of inspection, cannot be attributed to the master. I think that the rule "and the reason for it are well stated by Tract, J., in Durkin v. Sharp (88 N. Y. 225) : “ The inspection of the track was a duty
Of course, if the duty, although devolved, still be that of the master, the neglect of him who discharges the duty is the neglect of the master. For it would be anomalous and illogical to hold the master, who personally inspected, for neglect, and yet free him provided the .act of inspection was vicarious. This rule, of course, may well be -subject to the qualifications suggested in the opinion of Cullen, J., in McGuire v. Bell Telephone Co. (167 N. Y. 208, 212), to the effect that “ the application of this rule may depend on the nature •of the work and the manner of its conduct.” The rule and its qualification were considered by this court in Dittman v. Edison El. Illuminating Co. (87 App. Div. 68).
The intestate was usually employed in the grinding of argols; he liad never been at this tank in any capacity when it was used for boiling purposes, and he was called in this day as a substitute for an absent shoveler by the defendant foreman. There is evidence that he could not have heard the conversation between Nelson and the foreman that preceded the accident. It is not to be ¡assumed as matter of law that he could have known or ought to have known that the wood was rotten or that the plate was insecurely fastened thereon, or that the slight escape of steam from the edge of the plate was an indication of approaching danger, though it was clear enough to Nelson, who had been a shoveler for ¡a year and a half, or to Poulson, the foreman. I think that the question of his culpability was a question for the jury. (Finn v. Cassidy, 165 N. Y. 584, 589 ; Borgeson v. United States Projectile Co., 2 App. Div. 57.)
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs. ■
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.