53 N.Y.S. 460 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The action was brought to recover damages for injuries sustained by the plaintiff while working as a laborer in the employ of the
in At the place- where the plaintiff was digging the tre: through made ground, and it was necessary to sustain the that they would not cave in and fall upon the workmen. ' ner in which this was to be’done was well understood by the and was explained by him in his testimony. He said subsjti that after the ground- had been excavated to, the depth of of feet, stringers of plank running horizontally were put side of the- trench and held there by. braces extending fro the other across the trench, and planks were driven perpend: between these stringers and the wall down to the bottom trench. ■ He said further that it was customary' to dig down three feet and then drive down planks, and then dig down three feet, or four or five feet, and then drive the plan' again. The sheet piling - was put in in that way. He further that if in the excavation they came to a rock stickia, the side of the bank while.they were driving down the shee of course the piling liad to stop above that rock because not be driven through the stone. .That, he said, was tlie of the place where he was at work. He testified that t piling had been provided at this place and had been drive until it reached the top of á large stone projecting from of the trench... The plaintiff was at work in the trench op-stone, and without taking any precautions against its fall he trench deeper below it, and while he was thus engaged t caved in'and the stone fell upon him and seriously injured him. This was the plaintiff’s own statement of the manner in which the accident happened. It was made to appear, and was not disputed, rfch went sides so 'he man-plaintiff anti ally, i -couple on each one to ieularly of the two or two or is down testified g out of t piling, it could condition he sheet m down the side posite the dug the th íe ear'
The rule is well settled that it is the duty of the servant to attend to all details of the work which accompany its performance, and if an accident happens because of his failure to attend to that part of the work the employer is not responsible, if he has used reasonable care to furnish the necessary materials to enable the laborer to do the work properly. (Cullen v. Norton, 126 N. Y. 1; Butler v. Townsend, Id. 105.) When anything is connected with the work, and is an essential part of its performance, is done by persons who are engaged in the prosecution of' the work, and is necessary to be done to insure the safe completion of the work, that thing is a detail of the work within this rule. Especially is this so when the. work itself is the making of a place in which it is to be done. Where that is the case the rule which requires the master to provide a reasonably safe place for his servants in which to do their work, has no application. If in the doing of that work the place becomes
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.