125 N.E. 539 | NY | 1919
The plaintiff, an ironwroker, employed in the construction of the Hotel Biltmore in the city of New York, found it necessary to go from one end of the building to the other, to get some bolts. He walked over planking, laid upon the steel framework of the fourteenth floor, until he came to an obstruction. The obstruction was a pile of steel beams which had been thrown across his path. He climbed over the beams, and in so doing, was injured. The jury found by their verdict that no planking sufficient to supply a pathway of reasonable safety, had been placed on either side of the obstruction. The Appellate Division held that it was a question of fact whether planking had been provided to the east, but that the uncontradicted evidence showed sufficient planking to the west; and thus interpreting the evidence, dismissed the complaint.
We think the presence of sufficient planking to the west as to the east, was a question for the jury. The plaintiff says that he looked, and saw none on either side. On cross-examination, he was led to admit the possibility that one or two planks might have been laid to the west without his seeing them. Even so, a jury was not required to deny any significance to his statement that, looking, he saw none. But the testimony of the plaintiff does not stand alone. It is supported and strengthened by that of his witness, Cooney. Cooney says that there was no pathway to the west. There were one or two planks beside the base of the pile, but five or six beams jutted out across the planks, and impeded, without preventing, passage. A photograph produced by the defendant shows two planks thus obstructed, and two others clear. This photograph, according to Cooney, does not truly depict the situation at the moment of the accident. He says that he himself laid the clear planks after the plaintiff was hurt, and before the photograph was taken. This testimony seems to have been overlooked at the Appellate Division. The trial judge instructed *364 the jury that if they found the photograph correct, they could give no verdict to the plaintiff. Their verdict in his favor imports a finding that it was false. Other photographs taken at the same time show ample planking at the east. The defendant concedes, however, that the situation at the east was a question for the jury. If the photographs misrepresented the situation on one side, a jury might not unreasonably accept the statement of Cooney that they did so on the other. In the view of the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff, the defendant had provided no planking on the left, and on the right had provided one or two boards obstructed by protruding beams.
We cannot say that such a walk makes out compliance with the defendant's duty. The statute requires that the contractors or the owners "shall thoroughly plank over the entire tier of iron or steel beams and extending not less than six feet beyond such beams on which the structural iron or steel work is being erected" (Labor Law, sec.
Other rulings are pressed upon us by the defendant as sufficient, in any event, to require a new trial. We find no error to the prejudice of the defendant in any of them. There was none in the examination of the witness Gansler. The cross-examination opened the door to a full disclosure of everything said and done when Gansler was approached and his testimony solicited (Nowack v. Met. Street Railway Co.,
The judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and that of the Trial Term affirmed, with costs in the Appellate Division and in this court.
COLLIN, HOGAN, POUND and ELKUS, JJ., concur; HISCOCK, Ch. J., absent; McLAUGHLIN, J., not sitting.
Judgment reversed, etc.