127 N.Y.S. 506 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
Lead Opinion
This is a statutory action to recover for the death of Herman Greenberg, who was in the employ of the defendant, and while in, the performance of his duty at its plant met with an accident shortly before noon on the 6th day of August, 1904, from which he sustained a compound fracture of the left femur or thigh bone and was taken to the Lincoln Hospital and Home in an ambulance, arriving there .at twelve-thirty-five p. m., and he was operated on,
The only evidence received relating to the cause of death, other than the personal injuries, consists of the record of the hospital and the testimony of Dr. Comte, who was the house surgeon at the hospital and who made a physical examination of the decedent and performed the operation, but had no personal recollection of the case or of any fact or circumstance connected with it, and his testimony was based entirely on the hospital records, part of which he made and part of which were made by others. The decedent remained at the hospital in charge of a nurse but under the immediate supervision, care and treatment of Dr. Comte and of the assistant house surgeon, and was seen from time to time by the visiting surgeon, who died before the trial. The assistant house surgeon was'in the South at the time of the trial and his testimony was not procured, nor was the physician who administered the anaesthetic at the time of the operation, or the nurse or those who made the part of the hospital records of this case not made by Dr. Comte called or accounted for on the trial. Dr. Comte testified, in substance, that through an oversight on his part or on the part of his assistant, no diagnosis of the case was made by either of them, and none of the observations subsequent to the operations was entered in the records ; and that, owing to this omission, the records did not show whether or not any new complications intervened or whether the condition -in which the decedent was when brought to the hospital had any connection with the pneumonia or with his death, and that it was possible that there was no connection between them. The hospital records showed that on the physical examination of the decedent before the operation no evidence of disease of the heart,
Dr. Comte testified that he could not say whether he or his assistant made out the death card, which was not produced of accounted for, but that he copied the entry in the hospital records with respect thereto from the death card; that pulmonary embolus means that the individual is suddenly seized with sharp pains in his chest and almost immediately death follows. “A pulmonary embolus is a plugging up of the pulmonary artery by means of some foreign substance that has got in the circulation some way or other. This foreign substance-may come from anywhere in the body so long as it gets into the circulation. Following an injury an embolus
The duties of decedent were to operate a freight elevator and to load freight into the elevator and to unload it. At the street floor there was a gate near the opening in the elevator which was held at either end in a groove. When the elevator was at the floor and access thereto was desired the gate was slid up perpendicularly by hand and was caught and held by a spring which was released automatically when the elevator went up or down. Just before the accident the decedent ran the elevator down to this floor, stopped and elevated the gate and proceeded to wheel a hand truck loaded with an iron tank, which weighed about 450 pounds, and had been left within a few feet of the elevator by other employees, onto the elevator by backing toward the elevator and pulling it after him. The cable by which the elevator was operated could be reached at other floors, and evidently some other employee on another floor in the meantime pulled the cable and moved the elevator upward, but the gate did not drop, and the decedent backed into the open elevator shaft and fell to the bottom. The negligence charged against the defendant is failure to discover and repair the spring attached to one of the posts supporting the gate. This spring evidently was a flat narrow strip of steel, and was secured to the post at the lower end by three screws in a perpendicular row and some distance apart, and extending above the last screw upward and outward from the post, with the upper end bent in toward the post in the form of' a goose neck, but not attached thereto or coming in contact therewith. When the elevator was at this floor another strip of iron or steel, also referred to as a spring, attached to it at either end, but bulging outward at the middle, pressed against the spring attached to the post of the gate and pressed the upper end thereof in toward the gate, and another spring attached to the gate proper pressed against this upper end so bent on passing, and when above being released, sprung outward and caught against the upper end of the spring attached to the post, and was held there until released by that spring springing back on the removal of the pressure against it from the spring on the elevator. The theory of the plaintiff is that the spring attached to the post had become loose, and had
A carpenter employed by defendant at tbe time of the accident testified that on the following Monday, he thought during the forenoon, but was not sure, he was directed by the superintendent to inspect the elevator, and he discovered that the lowest of the three screws was missing from the spring attached to the gate post, and that the middle screw was loose, and that this left the spring so that he “ supposed,” but did not know, the spring would not always release the gate. Over objection duly taken that-the evidence was incompetent, and called for a guess or surmise on the part of the witness, he was permitted to testify as to whether the condition he found had been but recently created, or had existed for some time, and he answered that it might have taken a day and it might have taken three months to loosen the screws, but that he thought it did not take so long because he had repaired the gate and left it in proper repair within a month of the accident. He also testified that trucks backed in there, and frequently backed against the gate and that if one backed against it, that would “ put it out of commission, it would break it, or else it would loosen tbe springs i.n it,” and that the condition he found might have been caused “ the day before; ” and later on he said that he did not
It follows, therefore, that the judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Clarke, Scott and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the reversal of this judgment upon the ground that the evidence did not establish that the defendant was guilty of negligence. There was no satisfactory evidence that the gate refused to work because of any defect in the gate itself, or that this loose spring could have held the gate in position after the elevator had been moved. The evidence shows that the gate worked properly immediately before and after the accident. Upon the whole evidence I think it conclusively appeared that the defendant exercised all the care possible to keep this machinery in good order.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.