88 N.Y.S. 520 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
Plaintiff’s intestate, Patrick Moran, was a laborer in the employ of Kyran A. Murphy, a contractor, who was engaged in the erection of a school building in the borough of Brooklyn. The defendant was in the hod elevator business, and furnished to the contractor a hod elevator for use in the erection of the building, together with necessary rigging, and an engine and engineer to operate the elevator. Just before the accident which caused Moran’s death, the elevator had been raised from the cellar to the first floor, where it stopped. While Moran was in the act of placing a hod of bricks upon the
The learned trial judge was undoubtedly right in holding' that the deceased and the engineer in charge of the hod elevator were not' fellow-servants. (Mills v. Thomas Elevator Co., 54 App. Div. 124; affd., 172 N. Y. 660.) He charged the jury that the defendant was liable for the want of reasonable care upon the part of the engineer, and the correctness of this proposition is not disputed, the contention of the appellant being simply that the evidence did not suffice to establish the absence of such care. There was abundant testimony, however, showing. that the customary method of advising the engineer when to raise and lower the elevator was the ringing of a bell attached to the apparatus, and the engineer did not ordinarily heed oral directions to raise, or lower it when the bell was in working order. The bell appears to have been in working order at the time of the accident, because the engineer himself testified: “ When the elevator left the cellar to go up to the first floor just before this accident the bell had rung.” The bell did not ring, however, as a signal to lower it, but the engineer attempts to justify his action in letting it down at the time when the plaintiff was hurt by saying that some one in the cellar called out to him, “Engineer, lower the machine down.” He admits that lie did not see the person who gave this order, and did not know who lie was. It seems to me that the engineer’s own account of the occurrence is such as to warrant the imputation of negligence against him. If the call had come from the floor above, where the elevator had been stopped, it might reasonably be argued that it was consistent with care and prudence on his part to obey it, inasmuch as a person upon that floor would know the condition of
There is also evidence in the case tending to show that the call which the engineer claims to have obeyed consisted merely of the words “ Let it down,” and did not expressly refer to the elevator at all, but came from an upper floor, and related to work in no wise connected with the elevator. If such was the fact, I think the jury were also at liberty to infer negligence on the part of the engineer in complying with a direction coming from a distant part of the building where he ought to have known that the elevator could not have been at that time.
On the whole case I think the evidence was sufficient to sustain the verdict, and that the judgment should be affirmed.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.