99 N.Y.S. 923 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
In the manufacturing establishment of the defendant there was a boiler room with six. boilers- in use. The deceased was one of three firemen who kept up the fires under them. There was a door from the" boiler room into the yard ; it was only from eight to twelve feet from the boilers. Outside of this door, about six or seven feet,from it, and alongside the building, was a large tank of
It seems to me a thing unquestionable that it was the duty of the defendant to the deceased and his fellow-workmen,to use reasonable care to keep the tank safe from bursting. The door was there Connecting the boiler room with the yard, and free to be opened and uséd by them, and for no Other use, so far as appears. It was natural .and proper and to be expected that they should step outside to eat tlieir dinner or wash; and moreover it had so long been their custom to do so that it was to be presumed that the defendant knew of it. The deceased was doing work of his own at ,the tank when he was hurt, it is- true, blit it was work which workmen who work-at such dirty employments customarily do.-" It would be too much to say that the master in such a case as this owes no-duty to bis servant except while he is in front of his furnace shoveling in fuel, or raking ashes and cinders. The law is not so hard a taskmaster as that, butdiumane and reasonable. Workmen in boiler rooms’ and ' dirty shops may step aside to a convenient place at hand in their working place, or'so adjacent as to be of it or appurtenant to i!t, to eat or clean. up, - without getting outside the duty which their employer owes to t-liem to take reasonable care of their safety.
The case of Muhlens v. Obermeyer & Liebmann (83 App.
Present — Jenks, Hookeb, Gaynor, Rich and Miller, JJ.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.