12 A.D. 501 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
This action was brought to recover damages arising from negligence of the defendant which resulted in the death of the plaintiff’s intestate, who was at that time in the defendant’s employ. The accident occurred on the 2d day of ¡November, 1893, by the explosion of a steam boiler situated in the building occtrpied by the defendant in East Fourteenth street. It was claimed, on the part of the plaintiff, that the explosion of the boiler was due to defects which ought to have been discovered by the defendant if there had been a proper inspection, and that the defendant was negligent in not properly inspecting the boiler. The case was submitted to a jury and a verdict was rendered for the defendant upon which judgment was entered. A motion for a new trial upon the judge’s minutes was made and denied, and an appeal was taken from the order denying that motion, but that appeal has been withdrawn and the case stands here solely upon the appeal from the judgment. ¡No question is made as to the sufficiency of evidence to sustain the verdict. The plaintiff asks for a new trial solely upon the grounds of the exceptions taken upon the trial. Indeed, all the evidence, taken in .this case is not presented, but only so much of it is included in the case as is supposed by the appellant to be necessary to present the questions which have been argued. Several exceptions were taken to the admission of evidence. Some of these are practically disposed of by what' has been said in the case of Egan, v. D. D., E. B. & B. R. R. Co. (post, p. 556), argued just before this case, but none of the exceptions to evidence are relied upon in the plaintiff’s brief, and no exceptions will be examined except those which have been discussed therein. •
The general rules of law which control in' eases of this kind are well settled, and, the difficulty usually occurs in the application of the rules as to which no question can 'arise.
The only questions which the plaintiff raises upon this appeal are presented upon alleged errors in the charge of the court or in its refusal to charge requests presented by the plaintiff. In considering these errors it must not be forgotten that the sole object of the charge of the court is to present to the jury plainly, correctly and distinctly, the legal propositions upon which the case depends; to state to them the questions of fact which it is necessary that they should decide, and to explain to them, so far as the judge may deem proper, the relation which the several facts appearing in the case bear to the legal questions which are presented. The manner in which that shall be done is entirely within the discretion of the trial court. If the charge, as a whole, correctly instructs the jury on the questions of law which are involved, and presents them fairly, so that the jury are not misled, the charge must be sustained, although detached portions of it might be subject to criticism. As is said by Church, Ch. J., in Caldwell v. New Jersey Steamboat Company (47 N. Y. 282, 285): “ If the charge, as a whole, conveyed to the jury the correct rule of law on a given question, the judgment will, not be reversed although detached sentences may be erroneous.”
Many of the exceptions arise from the refusal of the court to charge different requests of the counsel. In examining the correctness of these refusals, it is necessary to consider not only whether the requests were .correct, but also whether the charge of the court substantially covered, in correct terms, the subjects included in the requests, because, if it did, it would not be error to refuse the requests. When the court has once given to the jury correct instructions on any point, and said all that is necessary to be said on
The first exception relied upon by the plaintiff is to the refusal to charge the seventh request of the plaintiff, which was: “ It is for the jury to say, from all the facts, whether or not the defendants were chargeable with negligence in the use of the boiler,' tinder the circumstances. The defendants must be held liable for such defects in the manufacture of the boiler, or in its subsequent condition, which they knew or ought to have known, and for any negligence in the use of the boiler which can be attributed to them.” In examining this request it is to be remarked that there was no proof in the case that there' were any defects in the manufacture of the boiler. On the contrary, the evidence is undisputed that this boiler was made by reputable makers who had an established reputation for the manufacture of boilers; that the iron was of good quality, and that there was nothing which could raise an inference that it did not come to the defendants in perfect condition from the manufacturers, and that it was not then entirely fitted for the purpose for which it was constructed. For that reason it was not error to refuse to charge in the words in which the request was -framed. But the court had practically charged not only all that it was required to upon the subject, but substantially all that was proper in the seventh request which was refused. The jury had been told that, in the performance of his duty, the master must not only furnish suitable and safe machinery in the first instance, but must also use reasonable diligence to keep it in repair; and where the machinery or appliance is of such a nature that it becomes highly dangerous when not in good repair, then the duty is imposed upon the master of making such reasonable inspection and examination -for indications of danger as are suitable and proper under the circumstances, and are prescribed by the practice of ordinary men under similar circumstances; that the' defendants were liable for the omission of such care as men of ordi
It seems to us that the portions' of the charge- thus quoted gave to the jury the proper rule of law, and instructed them sufficiently as to the nature of the liability of the defendant; and that even though the seventh request, above quoted, had not been too broad, the court had sufficiently instructed the jury on the point covered by it. .
It is complained that the court erred in refusing to instruct the juiy in the words of the third request, which is, substantially, that ordinary care required that the master should take .notice of the liability of machíneiy to wear out, and that the owner did not exercise ordinary care who gave .no attention to the state of machinery, boilei’s, or the like, which is liable to wear out by continual use, and it was,, therefore, necessary in the operation of an appliance like a steam boiler, which is dangerous when out of repair, and which, after a number of'years, commences to deteriorate more rapidly, to make reasonably frequent examinations of it to see that it is kept in good repair, or replace it when it becomes so worn as to be no longer safe. This request was not based upon the evidence in the case, and was not based in all its parts upon a fair inference from the evidence. There was nothing to show that the defendants here gave no attention to the effect upon the boiler which is produced by continued use, nor was there any evidence in the case from which the jury might have said that the boiler was deteriorated on account of age. . As we have seen, the court had already charged the jury as to the necessity of reasonable inspection by the master, and that instruction was all that the plaintiff was entitled to ask for at the hands of the court.
It is quite evident that this request to charge was.not warranted by anything in the case. There was no jDroof in the case that the defendant shut its eyes and took the risk of tliis boiler on the faith of an inspection of whose character it knew nothing, nor was there any proof that the persons who inspected the boiler on behalf of the police department were not proper persons for their position and did not inspect the boiler thoroughly and sufficiently within the rules ,of that department. The inspection required by those rules was the hydrostatic test. It was conceded that, that test was applied and there-was nothing in the ease to show that, it was not properly applied., The question was whether or not the defendants had the right to rely upon that test alone, and that was the only question in connection with it. ■ Upon that point the jury had already been informed, in compliance with the request of the plaintiff, that the inspection ' by the police department did. not establish that the defendant was not guilty of negligence; that their duty was not limited to the measures imposed by the statute, but that they should, in addition to those inspections, use those ordinary precautions to avoid accidents which are prescribed by ordinary prudence and diligence. This is all the instruction upon that subject- to which the plaintiff was entitled, and the court was not called upon to give the instruction in the particular words specified in .the eleventh request.
It was not error to refuse to charge the twelfth request, because
The same may be said of the thirteenth request. That is one. request and it contains several propositions of law, all of which, at one time or another, were submitted to the jury in the judge’s charge. The only negligence which could be predicated of any servant in the management of this boiler was the failure to properly inspect it, and the jury were told more than once in the case that any such failure was the failure of the defendant, and that he was liable for it.
The court was not called upon to call the attention of the jury to •any particular evidence in the case. The jury had been told by the charge of the court that they should weigh and consider all the evidence, and they were given such instruction in regard to that consideration as the court considered sufficient, and which was sufficient, and for that reason it was not error to refuse to give the additional instruction contained in the fourteenth request. '
It is quite possible that if the fourth request of the defendant, which was charged, had stood alone, it would have been error to submit it to the jury, for it might have misled them in the consideration of the case. But we find that after the judge had charged that request in the words of the defendant’s counsel, he explained it to the jury, so that it is clear-that they could only have understood that ordinary care, skill and diligence.in the management and use of the boiler, referred to testing it and to nothing else. With that explanation not only was the charge not erroneous, but it was absolutely correct.
The twelfth request of. the defendant, which was that “when a servant voluntarily enters into or continues in the service of his employer, having knowledge of, or the means of knowing, the dan-
This .disposes of all the objections taken by the appellant to the charge, except that to the ■ twentieth request. That request refers solely to the rule of damages, and as it is evident from the verdict for the defendant that the question of damages was not considered by the jury, it is not necessary for that question to be considered here.
Upon careful consideration of all the exceptions which are presented in the brief of the appellant, and a comparison of. them with the charge as made, we are brought to the Conclusion that no reversible error was committed, and the judgment must be affirmed.
Barrett, Patterson, O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.
' Judgment affirmed, with costs...