134 N.Y.S. 313 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
Plaintiff’s intestate, an employee of defendant, and being then engaged in its service, was injured by an explosion of dynamite used by it in rock excavation. His death followed as a result of the injury. Plaintiff based his claim that the injury was due to defendant’s negligence principally upon the charge that the system, or method, then employed by it to give warning to its employees that a blast was about to be fired was insufficient and improper. Evidence was presented tending to prove that the warning signals used by others for that purpose included the sounding of a steam whistle, or, in the absence of the means of giving that warning, by blowing a horn. A finding that the system of signals then in use by defendant was inadequate was warranted by the proof. But the question of
The case appearing in the record now before us does not present anything to show that defendant claimed that it was, at the time of the accident, impracticable to give a warning signal by the use of a horn, a method suggested by plaintiff’s witnesses as a proper one, and no other fact or condition appears as a reason why this evidence was competent as being an exception to the general rule that it is inadmissible.
All concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.