231 F. 861 | 2d Cir. | 1916
This action was brought under the Employers’ Liability Act of the state of New York. The complainant alleges that he was at the time of the accident employed by the defendant, a foreign corporation organized under the laws of the state of West Virginia—that while so employed he was engaged in working in a certain shaft maintained by defendant in connection with the work being done by defendant in -the construction of the new aqueduct for the city of New York; that on August 22, 1913, while working in the shaft he was struck by a rock which fell from the roof and threw him to the ground and crushed him; that the injuries he received were caused by the negligence of defendant and the carelessness of the persons intrusted by it with the superintendence of the work. It is also alleged that as a result of his injuries his leg was amputated, his arms fractured, and that he suffered permanent injuries to his head, back, spine, hips, and internal organs. The jury found the defendant guilty of negligence and awarded the plaintiff the sum of $21,500, which the trial judge later reduced to the sum of $15,000.
The case has previously been before this court. At that time the plaintiff had obtained a verdict for $5,000. We reversed the judg
There is no dispute but that notice was served within the time fixed by the statute. Neither is there any question but that it was served in the proper manner. The question is whether it was served “at the principal office” of the defendant. The record in this case differs from the record in the former case in the evidence bearing upon this question.
The trial judge left it to the juiy to determine whether the notice had been served at defendant’s “principal office” when it was mailed to the Van Cortlandt Park office and charged that there could be no recovery unless the Van Cortlandt Park office was defendant’s “principal office” at the time of the service. The instruction of the court, on this matter was full and clear, covering more than five printed pages. On this question the court charged in part as follows:
“What does ‘principal oílieo’ mean? I should say that an office that they themselves regarded as their real headquarters, and that in itself is to be determined by the things that they did there, and at any other oflice. The comparative importance of the tilings they did at the two places, not the actual work- that is being done under the contract, because a man can have his principal office downtown and have his work away uptown. But the office. The office is the place for correspondence, it is the place for the bookkeeping. It is the place for the people themselves to regard as their headquarters. The place for the executive officers! of the corporation.
In your judgment did these parties, the officers of the defendant, on September 4, 1913, consider, and were they in reason justified in considering Van Cortlandt Park as their real headquarters and principal office, or did they consider and were they justified in considering Cornwall on the Hudson as.their principal oflice?”
The verdict shows that the jury were satisfied that the Van Cortlandt Park office was -at the time of service the principal office.
“That the place within the state of New York which is to be its principal place of business is Cornwall on the Hudson, Orange county, New York.”
Now no parol evidence was introduced to contradict the certificate in the particular referred to and to show that defendant’s “principal place of business” was not Cornwall on the Hudson. On the contrary, the parol evidence introduced was admitted to show, not where defendant had its “principal place of business,” but to show where it had its “principal office.” The terms “principal place of business” and “principal office” are by no means synonymous and are not used as synonymous in the New York General Corporation Law. That the two terms are not used as synonymous is clearly shown by the phraseology of the act which states that:
“The term ‘office of the corporation’ means its principal office within the state or principal place of business within the state if it has no principal office therein.” Laws of 1909, c. 28 (Consol. Laws, c. 23) § 3, subd. 9.
The parol evidence was properly received; and the question whether the Van Cortland Park office was at the time of service the principal office of defendant was one of fact which was properly submitted to the jury.
“We have established our city office at Van Cortlandt Park, to be used during the construction of contract No. 63, and we respectfully ask that in the future you will kindly address us at that address on all matters pertaining to this contract, instead of Cornwall on Hudson, N. Y., as given in our proposal.”
There was other evidence which tended to show that Van Cortlandt Park was, in September 1913, when the notice was given, the principal office of defendant within the state. One fact alone will be referred to. A process server testified that in September, 1912, he went to serve certain papers on defendant at the office at Van Cortlandt Park and asked the defendant’s president “where his principal office was in New York state, so that I could serve papers.” “Did you tell him that?” the court inquired. To which the witness replied, “Yes, sir. That was exactly what I told him beforehand, so that I could serve papers in connection with cases I may have against him, and he told me right here, meaning Van Cortlandt Park, where we were standing.” The witness went on to explain more specifically that what he asked was where the principal office of the corporation was. There was evidence to the effect that no such conversation took place, but
The defendant contends that the evidence shows that the accident happened without any negligence whatever on its part and that it was a case of pure accident. We have looked into the evidence with care and are satisfied that it was sufficient to justify the submission of the charge of negligence to the jury.
The defendant also contends that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law. We do not think so. Contributory negligence under the New York act is a defense to be pleaded and proved by defendant. Consolidated Laws N. Y. c. 31, as amended by chapter 352, Laws 1910. Defendant has pleaded it, but the question whether it has proved it was upon the evidence a question for the jury. The evidence upon the first appeal upon the question of plaintiff’s contributory negligence is practically identical with the evidence on the present appeal. We then declared that “the only error we discover in the bill of exceptions is connected with the service of the notice.” It seemed to us then, as it seems to us now, fhat there was no error in submitting the question of plaintiff’s contributory negligence to the jury.
Judgment affirmed.