120 N.Y.S. 652 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
The respondent has secured, a verdict against the defendant in an action for personal injuries. He was a carpenter and while engaged with a fellow-carpenter was injured by the fall of a scaffold upon which they were working in the erection of a mill for the defendant. They were directed by the defendant’s superintendent to use in constructing the scaffold certain patented adjustable scaffold jacks, and it required four of the jacks to make the scaffold which they used. Each jack was formed of two legs fastened at the top and spread at the bottom in the shape of a letter “ A,” with a headeij on the top of each jack where it was fastened by. clamps. From the center of the crosspiece of the jack a brace extended in a diagonal direction to the header to which it was fastened by an iron thumb screw clamp. The legs of the jacks were adjustable so that a scaffold could be constructed of any required height. In the present instance the scaffold was about six feet from the floor. The scaffold was so constructed that the legs could be placed in a vertical position in relation to the header or could be spread at the bottom by the adjustment of the clamps on one end of the brace extending
The plaintjff had the evidence of an expert that these jacks were insufficient. His opinion was formed not from having seen the/, jacks and not with any knowledge of the size of the timbers of which they wére formed or of their tensile strength or of the strain upon the clamps, but was based upon a picture of the jacks and upon the testimony, lie lieard in court about them. In addition to this there was the fact that the clamps slipped and caused the platform to fall. As against this evidénce there was the evidence of the defendant’s witnesses that these jacks had been used a great many times and had carried upon many occasions, prior to the acci
It is urged here that our decision in Chiavaroli v. Union Bag & Paper Company (131 App. Div. 372) requires us, if we follow it, to affirm this judgment. That was a case where we reversed a judgment of nonsuit in an action brought by the plaintiff, who was an ordinary, unskilled day laborer, and who received injuries from the fall of this scaffold at the same time the plaintiff was injured. But the plaintiff in that case had nothing to do with the erection of the scaffold, and as he was nonsuited we were not favored with the defendant’s evidence with respect to the safety of the appliance, nor the uses to which it had been put on prior occasions in supporting greater loads than were on it at the time of the accident. The casó is, therefore, not against the position we now take.
The respondent also urges that because in his complaint sufficient facts were pleaded to justify a recovery under the Employers’ Liability Act (Laws of 1902, chap. 600) and under sections 18 and 19 of the Labor Law (Laws of 1897, chap. 415, as amd. by Laws of 1899, chap. 192), as well as under the common law, he could invoke these statutory enactments in support of his judgment. But the only question submitted to the jury was under the alleged common law. liability. The questions of the relation of the Employers’ Liability Act or the Labor Law to this accident, or of any liability of the defendant under either of these statutes were not submitted
The judgment and.order should he reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
All concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to - appellant to abide event. ■