41 N.Y.S. 99 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
This action is brought to recover damages for the death of plaintiff’s intestate. -The "deceased, who, at the time of the accident which caused his death was fourteen years old, was employed in the factory of the defendant. The defendant was engaged in the manufacture of household utensils. The particular workupon which the deceased was employed was the cleaning of spoons. The general process of cleaning the spoons was, briefly, as follows : The spoons were first dipped into melted or boiling grease, and then into a pot of melted metal; they were then again dipped into the boiling grease, then taken out and the grease allowed to drain off to some extent; then after being shaken they were placed on a perforated pan, which was put into a bath of turpentine. After remaining there about two minutes the spoons were taken out of the turpentine and placed in sawdust. The turpentine was used to clean the grease from the spoons and at times would smoke from the repeated insertions of the heated metal. It was the custom to change -the turpentine from time to time, as it became “ dirty ” from use. The deceased had been in this employment for three days. At the time of the accident, which was shortly after the noon intermission from
The only exceptions taken on the trial were to the refusal of the court to dismiss the complaint. Hence the sole question presented by- this appeal is whether in any aspect of the evidence the jury was warranted in finding that the defendant had been guilty of negligence which caused the accident. The occurrence of the accident was not.sufficient to impute fault to the defendant. The plaintiff was required to go further and establish some particular fault or shortcoming in the .discharge of the master’s duty. The defendant not only contends that if there was fault it was not on the part of the master, but the fault of a fellow-servant, but he further insists that the evidence was not sufficient to show from what cause the accident happened.
The evidence established that the turpentine had not been changed during the day of the accident. Of course the repeated insertions of the hot spoons tended to heat the turpentine and render it liable to ignite. The failure to change the turpentine it is claimed was the negligence of a fellow-servant. This would doubtless be the case had the master made any rule or regulation on the subject to guard against the danger. But none such seems to have been made. Whether the absence of any regulation would have been a sufficient ground upon which to predicate negligence presents a serious question which we need not decide, as we agree with the counsel for the defendant in his claim that the evidence would not warrant a finding that the failure to change the turpentine caused it to take fire. Had the turpentine ignited before the dinner hour, it might have been attributed to this cause. But the fire took place almost immediately after the dinner hour. During this intermission of three-quarters of an hour the turpentine must have cooled, and it is difficult, if not impossible, to see how the fire is to be attributed to its previously heated state.
•But though the fire did not occur from the failure to change the turpentine, we think the jury might well have found that it proceeded from the insertion of the heated spoons. The inflammable character of turpentine is a fact well known, and was established in this case by proof. That a metal spoon could be heated to a suffi-
The question then arises, was this cause of the fire to be ascribed to fault on the master’s part? It was undoubtedly the act of the deceased himself that led to the fire. If he knew or should have known of .the danger of inserting the S230ons when too hot, and the -duty of seeing that they had, to some extent, cooled before 2tiacing them in the turpentine, the fault or negligence was his own. But the deceased was an ignorant Italian boy only fourteen years old., He had worked in his occiypation only three days.' He was given •no instruction as to the danger of his enjoyment and no caution as to the care which he was to exercise to avoid such danger. -
In Hickey v. Taaffe (105 N. Y. 26) a recovery by the plaintiff, a child employed at an ironing machine, was defeated on the ground that she had acquired, by a period of six. weeks’ service, all the-information that instruction could impart to her. But it was them said: “Assuming the .plaintiff’s statement in this-case to be true, that she . had no instructions as to the danger of the machine, and that she had never worked at any machinery before, if under such circum- . stances this accident had happened within a short time of her
In Buckley v. Gutta Percha & Rubber Mfg. Co. (113 N. Y. 540) the plaintiff was injtu’ed by having his fingers crushed between cog wheels. He slipped on the floor, and to save himself from falling, instinctively put out his hand upon the moving cogs. It was held that the defendant was not liable, because the danger from placing his fingers between the revolving cogs must have been as obvious to the plaintiff as to any grown man. It was said : “ There is no rule of law that a minor may not be employed about a dangerous machine, and the simple fact that a machine is dangerous does not make an employer liable for an injury received by a minor employed upon such machine.” At the same time, however, the court recognized that instruction might be necessary, for it is further said : “All the law requires is that the minor should be,properly instructed -as to the danger to which he is exposed, and if he is injured because he has not received such instruction, then, as a general rule, the employer may be held responsible.”
So in Crown v. Orr (140 N. Y. 450), the plaintiff was injured by the knives of a planing machine. It was held that the danger was obvious and the plaintiff could not recover. .Still it was-again said : “ If the injury to the servant is attributable to the master’s neglect in omitting to furnish safe and adequate appliances for the work, according to the naturé of the business, or competent co-servants, or even if he neglects to gime persons unacquainted, with the use of machinery proper instructions with respect to its use, he is liable
The question is, therefore, further harrowed to this: Was the danger of the work obvious to plaintiff’s intestate, or, if not, was it such that proper instructions would have enabled the deceased to guard against it ? If this latter was the case, then the failure to instruct was negligence. We are of opinion that the danger was not obvious. Of course we know that turpentine is a very inflammable substance. Whether this boy was chargeable with that knowledge
, The fact that no previous accident of this character had happened does not relieve the master from liability, provided the accident was such that the probability of its occurrence might reasonably have been foreseen. We think this accident of such a character. The danger of igniting the turpentine from inserting the heated metal was one that should have been anticipated by a person having the technical knowledge on the subject that the master must have possessed.
The point is made that the deceased was not in the employ of the defendant, but of one Corrigan, the foreman, as an independent contractor. The evidence of the relation Corrigan bore to the defendant is meagre and its- purport not entirely clear. He testified, at first: “ I am foreman of this factory; the factory was carried on by the Central Stamping Company; owned by the Central Stamping Company;' and the foremen were employed by the Central
The judgment and order denying motion for a new trial appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred.
Judgment and order- unanimously affirmed, with costs.