111 N.Y.S. 255 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
The complaint was dismissed at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, and under well-established rules the latter, on appeal, has a right to have the most favorable view of the evidence which a jury might have found if the case had been submitted to their consideration. Tried by this test, we are of opinion, that this judgment must be reversed. The action was brought under the Employers’ Liability Act, alleging negligence on the part of a superintendent in not providing suitable appliances or ways. The immediate cause of the accident; according to the plaintiff’s evidence, was a depression in a runway used in removing copper from a cellar to a platform some twenty inches above the cellar floor. This runway appears to have been constructed of planks one and one-lialf inches in thickness, one laid above the other, and the 'two fastened together, giving a thickness of three inches. It was five or six feet wide, and twelve to sixteen feet in length, and at the upper end of- the runway the constant use had worn a depression, which at the lowest point appears to have passed through the upper plank. This depression seems to have been about twelve or fifteen inches in diameter, saucer-shaped, as it is described by some of the witnesses, and near the deepest point a wire nail, said to be as ■ thick as a pencil, was pounded down even with the wood, leaving a shining, smooth spot in this basin. It is claimed that the plaintiff, in coming out of the cellar with a load of copper on an ordinary hand truck, exerting himself up to his capacity, stepped into this depression, his foot slipped on the imbedded nail and he fell, the truck coming down upon him, inflicting serious injuries. At the close of plaintiff’s case the court granted a motion for a nonsuit upon the ground that the plaintiff had been guilty of contributory negligence or had accepted the obvious risk, by reason of the fact that the runway wus sufficiently lighted so that the plaintiff might have seen the defect if he had been in the exercise of reasonable care. The plaintiff appeals from the judgment.
The judgment appealed from should be reversed, and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
J enks, G-aynoe, Rich- and Miller, J J., concurred.
Judgment reversed, and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.