126 N.Y.S. 739 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
The servant Was dismissed at the- close of his, case against his master, on the ground that he had not made out a case- under the Employers’ Liability Act, or. Under the common law. The learned trial court also held that the- notice served under the said act was insufficient,' although we had by a divided court, held' otherwise (129 App. Div. 661). .The court thought that the dissentients expressed the law correctly, in view, of the decision in Finnigan v. N. Y. Contracting Co. (194 N. Y. 244), which was published after our judgment. But in view of the. latest decision of the Court of Appeals- in Logerto v. Central Building Co. (198 N. Y. 390), I think that our decision was right and for the reasons. expressed in the opinion of Miller, J. .....
' .The plaintiff had vvorked for the defendant for 14 moúths¿ and in the night time for 5 or 6 months of' that period, in the yard of an iron plant. About 1.0 :30 p. m. of April 22; 19Ó7, he was seeking for a shovel and was told by his foreman to fetch one from the. limestone pit. There were railroad 'tracks-between the place where the plaintiff was at Work and'the limestone- pit. The tracks Were used by the defendant for carriage 'of iron -from a- crane to its factory. The version of the -plaintiff -is that as he started he saw cars standing still on the track, which, he crossed by passing around an end of a car, that he found the shovel and that as he returned he saw again the cars, that he looked to see if there was a locomotive attached' to them , but saw none, and that, as he attempted to recross the,tracks - around :an end of the cars, the cars were moved so that he was struck and thrown -to the ground. The contention of the learned counsel for the appellant is that the case should-have been submitted to 'the- jury because they would have been justified in-finding negligence in the omission to make a rule requiring that-trains should not be started until after the ringing, of á bell to give warning to the employees working at night in or about the tracks, or that, if they did make -such a rule,'they permitted it to fall into.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.
Hirschberh, P. J., Bubb and Cabe, JJ.,- concurred ; Rich, J., dissented. - . ■
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.