102 N.Y.S. 223 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1907
The action is for negligence by the administrator of a servant against the master, and the master appeals from a judgment on the verdict. The appellant contends that there is neither proof of his negligence nor of the absence of the intestate’s contributory negligence. The servant, standing upon a scaffold at work on'a building, fell to the ground and was injured when the scaffold gave way. I think that there was sufficient evidence of the defendant’s negligence to sustain the verdict. We so held in Stach v. Wills (115 App. Div. 911), an action arising out of the same accident, and the testimony is much the same as in that case. The question of contributory negligence was for the jury.
The appellant also contends that there is total failure of proof that the accident was the.proximate cause of death, and hence the question arises whether the evidence is sufficient to justify the finding of the jury to that effect. The accident occurred on March 21, 1904. The intestate fell 15 or 20 feet, and there is evidence that building stones and mortar tubs'fell in upon him. He was taken to a hospital at once, and examination showed that his left leg was broken in two places, his right ankle -was partially fractured and dislocated, and he was bruised about the body, especially
In Seifter v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co. (169 N. Y. 254), cited by the leái-ned counsel for the appellant, the decision turned; upon a septic condition at the point of fracture, and,'therefore, it. was necessary for the plaintiff to offer evidence to establish infection at the point of fracture, whereas the salé physician who treated Seifter and who alone had made an examination after the cast was removed, testified that there was no evidence of degeneration or of septic condition (p. 260). This was the crucial point, and the plaintiff failed in it. But in this case there was the testimony'of the expert that death was,due to embolism of the heart,, that the ..embolism might be caused by a weakened condition of the blood vessels produced by strain, or by a person lying quiet in bed for 5 or 6 weeks, and also that there are embolisms caused by fractures-, so that á blood clot forms and gets in the circulation— when an .artery has been injured the clot forms in the healing, is dislodged and gets into the circulation, and when -the heart is affected death follows at
It is true, of course, as suggested by the learned counsel for the appellant, that the questions put to the experts outside of the .physician who attended the patient assumed that the patient died of embolis'm; hut these questions were to elicit the opinion whether the injury was the proximate cause, and the assumption was justified in view of the testimony of Dr. Hasbrouek. There is no merit in the criticism that the court permitted the question to Dr. Hasbrouek which assumed that he found embolism, for the reason that the witness testified that he knew the patient died of embolism. The only objection was that the question was “ incompetent ” without comment or explanation.
T advise that the judgment be affirmed, with costs.
Present-—■ Hibschberg, P. J., Woodward, Jenks, Rich and Miller, JJ.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.