51 N.Y.S. 128 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
This action is brought hy the plaintiff, an employee of defendants’ railroad, to recover damages for personal injuries received by him from the breaking of a push stick. The complaint charged that the plaintiff’s injury was occasioned by the negligence of the defendants in failing to furnish safe and suitable appliances. The plaintiff’s counsel, in opening the case, stated to the jury the facts which he intended to prove, and on which he claimed to establish the liability of the defendants. This opening was taken down, by the stenographer, and appears in the record. At the conclusion of counsel’s statement the complaint was dismissed, on the ground that the facts which counsel proposed to prove were insufficient to charge the defendants. •
In this case the plaintiff’s counsel seems not only not to have objected to the practice of the trial court, but to have invited and assented to it. Under the circumstances, we think the action'of the. court was not erroneous.
The case as detailed by the counsel was that the plaintiff for a long time had been in the service of the company as a yardman; that on the occasion of the accident he was directed to move a car from a siding, that the car was attempted to be: moved by what is called stacking. That name is applied to the operation of pushing a car on one track by an engine on an adjoining track, the force from the engine being applied to the car by a pole or stick of timber called a push stick. The plaintiff found there was no push stick on the engine. He, therefore, took a piece of timber lying in the vicinity and used. it for the purpose of pushing the car. It was insufficient, and broke, thereby inflicting the injuries for which he brings this suit.
On this state of facts we think the defendants were not liable. The plaintiff’s injuries were not caused by the failure to supply a push stick, but by the piece of timber that he voluntarily selected as a substitute for the stick. The stick was the simplest possible
The judgment appealed from should he affirmed, with costs.
Judgment unanimously, affirmed, with costs.