182 A.D. 705 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1918
The plaintiff was neither a trespasser nor a licensee on defendant’s premises. He was there by the invitation of defendant upon a business in which both the defendant and plaintiff’s employer were interested. The relation of the parties was such that the defendant owed plaintiff a duty to use reasonable care that he should not be exposed to risk through a defective or an unsafe condition of the premises. (Holmes v. North Eastern Railway Co., L. R. 4 Exch. 254; affd., 6 id. 123; Corby v. Hill, 4 Com. B. [N. S.] 556; Casey v. Lehigh Valley Railroad Co., 128 App. Div. 86; Dunn v. Cavanaugh, 185 Fed. Rep. 451; Heskell v. Auburn L., H. & P. Co., 209 N. Y. 86; Braun v. Buffalo General Electric Co., 200 id. 484.)
The serious question is whether there is evidence of a violation of this duty, or, in other words, evidence of negligence. When the facts are undisputed and the inferences from them plain and certain, negligence is a question of law, otherwise a mixed question of law and fact to be answered by the jury under proper instruction as to the law. In this case the unguarded wires, carrying a high voltage of electricity, were dangerous. If they were so located that a reasonable man should anticipate that they would cause injury to those rightfully on the premises, it was negligent to leave them so unguarded. The case, therefore, turns on this question: Whether danger from them might reasonably be anticipated. This, I think, is inherently a question of fact. No amount of legal learning will qualify to answer it. A juror, especially
The two wires ran along a beam on the side of the wall about ten feet above the floor and out of reach by one standing there. In the ordinary operation of the work at the factory, no one would be exposed to danger from them. The circumstances under which plaintiff received the shock were peculiar. Such a combination of circumstances whereby any one should undertake to measure the distance from the floor to the top of the crane, and in so doing should stand on a temporary railing put up for construction purposes, and so bring himself in contact with the wires, could not in reason be foreseen; nor do we see how the defendant was negligent in not anticipating danger from contact with the wires. The question of guarding these wires is akin to the statutory duty to guard machinery, and it has been held that such duty does not exist when the machinery is so located that danger therefrom could not reasonably be expected. (Glens Falls P. C. Co. v. Travelers’ Ins. Co., 162 N. Y. 399; Wynkoop v. Ludlow Valve Mfg. Co., 196 id. 324; Kimmerle v. Carey Printing Co., 144 App. Div. 714.)
The feeling which pervaded the community generally, including both jurors and judges, that business should bear the loss of the injury to human as well as inanimate material which is incidental to its prosecution, without too curious an inquiry into the cause, has found its expression, and satisfaction, in the Workmen’s Compensation Law. The intricate maze of law, both common law and statutes, with its delicate and refined distinctions, which governed the question' of employers’ liability, has in great measure been supplanted by a logical and human system of compensation for injuries. It is unfortunate that plaintiff either did not have or did not seek compensation under that law.
The judgment and order should be reversed and complaint dismissed, with costs.
Present — Jenks, P. J., Mills, Rich, Blackmar and Kelly, JJ.
Judgment and order reversed and complaint unanimously dismissed, with costs.