85 N.Y. 214 | NY | 1881
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *218 The defense in this case rested upon substantially two grounds. The first was that the servant, in exposing the boiler to a greater pressure than the one hundred and fifty pounds directed by the master, was doing an independent, willful, and criminal act of his own, outside of and beyond the scope of his employment and of the master's business. The second was that the plaintiff, by stopping in the highway to watch the result of an experiment, possibly dangerous, and persisting in remaining after having been warned of the danger and requested to leave, was guilty of contributory negligence. Both of these defenses were expressly withheld from the jury, and ruled adversely to the defendants as matter of law. As to the first defense the trial judge said: "I shall charge that the defendants are liable for the acts of Carter in testing this boiler." And again: "I shall hold that the defendants are liable for the injury, though it was caused by the act of their servant, and though the servant tested the boiler beyond a degree limited by them." The promise thus made was faithfully fulfilled in the charge itself. The jury were told that if they found that testing the boiler in the street was a negligent and careless use of the street, then the only remaining question was *219 the amount of damages; and that if they found that such use of the street was not negligent and careless, but nevertheless found that "the way" in which "the test" was made was negligent and careless, they should then go to the question of the amount of damages. The point of the ruling was further intensified by the explicit refusal to charge each of the two propositions, that the holding down of the safety-valve, under the circumstances, was such a careless, willful, wanton, wrongful and criminal act as not to be within the scope of Carter's employment, and that such act was a wrongful act of Carter, and not of the defendants; and also that if the jury find that Carter, in testing the boiler beyond one hundred and fifty pounds' pressure, was not acting within the scope of his employment by the defendants and in their business, plaintiff cannot recover."
The ruling upon the second defense, that of contributory negligence, was equally positive and distinct. The learned judge said: "I shall charge there is not sufficient evidence of contributory negligence in this case to defeat a recovery." And he did charge that "the mere fact that this plaintiff stopped to look at this experiment that was being performed before his eyes, and did not pass immediately by, is not such an act as the law deems to be contributory negligence." And again, the ruling was made expressly a ruling of law by a refusal, upon the defendants' request, to permit the question of contributory negligence to be submitted to the jury.
The questions, therefore, presented by this appeal are, whether there was any evidence fairly tending to prove that the act of Carter in raising the pressure beyond one hundred and fifty pounds was outside of the scope of his master's business, and was his own personal and independent act; and, secondly, whether there was any evidence tending to prove contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff.
The first inquiry will be more safely answered by a recurrence to the general rule established in this court, and which must be our guide when we approach the facts. Two cases have stated that general rule with perhaps as much of precision *220
and accuracy as was possible. (Mott v. Consumers' Ice Co.,
The distinction thus drawn must be the test of the master's liability in the case before us. The defendants were boiler-makers in the city of Binghamton, and having completed a boiler for a customer, placed it in the public street in front of their premises, and directed Carter, their superintendent, or master mechanic, to test it by starting the fires, and raising the steam. The customer requested of the defendant, Shapley, in the presence of Carter, that the boiler should be tested under a pressure of one hundred and eighty pounds. Shapley replied there was no use of testing it to one hundred and eighty; that one hundred and fifty was enough, since its ordinary use would not require over one hundred to one hundred and twenty-five pounds pressure. Carter, and King, the proposed purchaser, started for the street. On the way, the latter again expressed a wish for a test to one hundred and eighty pounds. Carter answered: "I will test it to two hundred any how; I had as lief test it to four hundred; you can't burst it." The fires were lighted and the experiment began, with the safety-valve loaded to a pressure of one hundred and ninety-eight pounds. That point was reached, and the escaping steam indicated at least that pressure. By this time the customer had gone, but Carter, with a reckless confidence in the strength of the boiler, sent two of the men to the shop for additional weights, and before their return, took hold of the lever, first with one hand and then with both, holding it down. On the instant, the explosion occurred, scattering death and injury around.
About these facts there is neither dispute nor contradiction. We must measure them by the rule already stated, and determine whether they raised a question of fact which ought to have been submitted to the jury. In testing the boiler Carter was acting in the master's business, and in the line of his own employment. That was the master's duty intrusted to the *222 servant. The experiment of actual trial was an essential element closing and finishing the manufacture. The test was an ordinary and usual act in the business, and had been many times before applied by the act of the same servant. In making the test the latter went beyond the master's wish. There was no peremptory command to stop at a pressure of one hundred and fifty pounds. What was said was advisory merely; the expression of an opinion by the master that such limit was sufficient. But the customer was not satisfied. He desired the test of a stronger pressure. The servant, in granting it, was acting for the master; seeking to satisfy the master's customer; establishing the strength and perfection of the master's workmanship; and this was just as true after one hundred and fifty pounds was passed as before. The servant was reckless and fool-hardy in his over confidence, but even if wanton and willful, and going beyond the master's direction, the latter is not excused, since the servant was still testing the boiler; doing an act within the scope of the master's business, and in the plain and definite line of the servant's employment. How can we apply the contrary theory to the existing facts? Did Carter go outside of his employment when the steam gauge indicated a pressure beyond one hundred and fifty pounds? Was he then acting without regard to his service, and to accomplish some purpose of his own foreign to his service? What was, or could have been, that foreign, independent, personal purpose, having no connection with the business of the master? There is not a shadow of evidence of its existence. No fact in the least indicates any such purpose or aim. It is idle to suppose that he meant to explode the boiler, and not only commit suicide, but involve innocent bystanders in the catastrophe. There was plainly no purpose, no object, no aim, except to test the boiler beyond the master's wish, in the rash and reckless confidence that it would bear the strain. In so doing he was engaged in the master's business although going beyond his directions. How, then, was there any question for the jury? The learned counsel for the appellants tersely and precisely touches the exact point of the controversy when he *223 claims that "it was the intervention of Carter's will, stepping in to accomplish an individual purpose, foreign to his authority" and beyond it, which caused the explosion. But we see no atom of evidence indicating any such individual or foreign purpose. What was it, we are compelled again to ask; and where is the proof? Plainly, it exists nowhere, unless in the fact that the master's wish was not heeded. But that fact tends to no such result. Carter was still serving the master, still testing the boiler, and if the experiment had been successful it would have been to the master's credit, and for the master's benefit. We think, therefore, the trial judge was right in withholding the question from the jury. The facts were undisputed and did not admit of different or contrary inferences. The question became purely a question of law and was correctly determined.
We pass now to the question of contributory negligence. While the boiler was in the street and the test was being applied, the plaintiff approached and stopped. He had a right to be in the street, and to pass by the boiler. He had also a right to stop and observe what was occurring. The question, however, is not one of right, but of ordinary prudence in its exercise. The boiler was in the street, with the fires lighted. It was directly in front of a boiler manufactory. It was connected with no machinery which it was driving or setting in motion. It was plain to the commonest observation that it was a new boiler, being tested. But this was not all. The plaintiff was warned of what was going on, and of the possible danger to which he was, voluntarily and without necessity, exposing himself. A witness testified that, a few minutes before the explosion and while standing within two feet of plaintiff, and both of them within six feet of Carter, he, the witness, spoke to the latter and said: "It isn't a good place to be standing here while you are testing that," and he said: "No, and I wish they would all leave." He said he wished "they would all go away; it wasn't a good place to stand around." The witness acted on the suggestion, and not only went away himself, but said to the others: "Boys, come; let's go away." *224
It is very certain that the plaintiff heard this warning, for he did not choose to take the witness stand and deny it. He knew, therefore, that he was watching an experiment, the issue of which he could not certainly foresee. The very idea of a test implies the possibility of failure. Whatever of risk was inseparable from the first test of an untried boiler, quite certain to be carried beyond the pressure of its ordinary use, this plaintiff took upon himself, without necessity or just occasion, and merely from a motive of idle curiosity. He is told that it is a test which is in progress, and warned of possible danger. Others prudently withdraw, but he takes the chance of remaining. The explosion happens, and he is seriously injured. The court held that these facts justified no inference of contributory negligence, and refused to submit the question as one of fact to the jury. The learned judge said that the only evidence of plaintiff's negligence was that he was there. But the person injured is always "there." Whether he ought to be there, whether it was necessary or prudent to be there, and why and under what circumstances, are often important questions. In the present case, while there is no dispute about the facts, the inquiry remains, whether there is not ground for dispute as to the proper inferences to be drawn from them; for negligence is not a fact, which is the subject of direct proof, but an inference from facts put in evidence. (Wharton on Neg., § 420.) It was said, inIreland v. O.H. S. Plankroad Co. (
The order should be reversed; and new trial granted; costs to abide the event.
FOLGER, Ch. J., EARL and RAPALLO, JJ., concur; ANDREWS, MILLER and DANFORTH, JJ., dissent.
Order reversed.