64 N.Y.S. 511 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
Lead Opinion
The defendant was the owner of an elevator on the bank of Buffalo creek, in the city of Buffalo, hi. Y., about 240 feet in length, extending north and south. A siding started at a point in the main track of the defendant’s railroad north of the elevator, extended through it and to a point 292 feet south of the southerly end. .The track- within the elevator was level. In the portion which extended to the south there was a gradual rise from the south door of less than one foot in one hundred feet, or two and three-tenths feet in the entire distance of 292 feet. Cars left on that part of the sidihg without setting the brakes, it is claimed, would start and move by gravity slowly down towards and into, the elevator. In fact, the track was built with this very slight — almost imperceptible incline, to facilitate placing- the cars by hand under the grain spouts in the elevator.
• The defendant had entered into a contract with one Sheehan which was in force at the time of the accident, a similar contract having- been in force for some years prior, which provided, among other things, that Sheehan was “ to load and trim all cars with grain that may be placed at second party’s elevator in -Buffalo, known as the Erie Elevator, ‘ * *. * ” and “ to furnish all labor necessary to move all cars from the south end of said Erie Elevator and place -such cars under the loading-spout, and. remove all such cars immediately after loading to a distance not less than sixty feet north from the northerly entrance of said Erie Elevator.”
The entire contractual obligation assumed by the defendant, so ■far as it affects apy .question involved upon this appeal, must be found in the foregoing provision.
The evidence tends to show that it had been the custom of the defendant for years prior to the accident, when it placed .cars upon the elevator track for Sheehan to load, to set the brake upon the southerly car of those standing upon the incline; that the plaintiff relied upon such custom and the accident resulted because of the failure of the defendant to follow such custom upon the occasion in question. It is claimed that such failure constituted negligence for which the defendant is liable to the plaintiff.'
Assuming that the facts-are as claimed by the plaintiff, do they establish a cause of action against the defendant in plaintiff’s favor ?
Concededly the cars, as placed on the elevator track by the defendant, were perfectly safe so long as they were not disturbed or interfered with. They became unsafe, if at all, because interfered with by
The fact that an act not imposed upon the obligor by the terms
It is understood that if one party furnishes to another cars or •other appliance's for a particular purpose, which are in a condition to make their use imminently dangerous to human life, or places them in a position or situation which renders their attempted use thus •dangerous, any person rightfully using or attempting to use the ¿same, who is injured 011 account of such condition or situation, may .recover for the damages sustained, and this is entirely independent •of the- provisions of any contract, either express or implied, under .which, such cars or .appliances were furnished. The rule is clearly ¿stated by Rapallo, J., in Devlin v. Smith (89 N. Y. 470, 477), as follows: “ As a general rule the builder of a structure for another party, under a contract with him, or one who sells an article of his •own manufacture, is not liable to an action by a third party who uses the same with the consent of the owner or purchaser, for injuries resulting from a defect therein caused by negligence. The liability of the builder or manufacturer for such defects is, in general, •only to the person with whom he contracted. But, notwithstanding 'this rule, liability -to third parties has been held to exist when the •defect is such -as to render the article in itself imminently dan.gerous, and serious injury to any person using it is a natural and probable consequence of its use.”
In the case of Thomas v. Winchester (6 N. Y. 397) the defendant, a dealer in drugs,, carelessly labeled a deadly poisqn as a harm less medicine. It was held that he was liable, not merely to the person to whom he sold the drug, but to the person who ultimately •used it. The liability was held to rest, not upon any contract, ■express or implied, but upon the duty which the law imposes upon ¿every one to avoid acts in their nature dangerous to the lives of -others. (Mayor v. Cunliff, 2 N. Y. 165.)
In the case of Coughtry v. Globe Woolen Co. (56 N. Y. 128) a •contractor entered into an agreement with the defendant to put a cornice upon its mill, the defendant- to erect all necessary scaffolding. The plaintiff’s intestate, an employee of the contractor, was.
In the case at bar the cars were not left in a situation which ren- . dered them imminently dangerous to human life within the meaning of any decision to which our attention has béen called.
In Mayor v. Cunliff (supra) it was said, by way of illustration, that to sell a wagon negligently manufactured out of defective materials, by which a friend of the purchaser, who borrowed it, was injured, did not entitle the person injured to recover damages against the maker, because the. act of the manufacturer in. selling the wagon was not such an act as was imminently dangerous to human life. .
In Loop v. Litchfield (42 N. Y. 351) it was held that to manm facture and sell a defective balance wheel for use in a machine for sawing wood by horse power, which defect was known to the purchaser, did not entitle an employee of the purchaser to recover from the manufacturer damages sustained by the bursting of the wheel, because the article was not in its nature imminently dangerous. (Longmeid v. Holliday, 6 Eng. L. & Eq. 562; Losee v. Clute, 51 N. Y. 494.)
The cars in question were left stationary by the defendant, and would have remained so indefinitely except. for the action of the . plaintiff and his co-employees. Eleven cars, in perfect repair, standing perfectly still upon a straight track, almost level, to be moved by the plaintiff and his co-employees in broad daylight, presents the situation. By the statement no element of danger is indicated. It describes a situation perfectly harmless. It is urged, however, that this situation, otherwise free from danger, became unsafe .and a menace to the life of Sheehan’s employees, simply’ because the .defendant had been in the habit of setting the brake on a car when
Attention is called to another class of cases, decided by the highest courts of this and other States, which it is claimed are, upon principle, authority for sustaining a recovery in this case.
The case of Kowalewska v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co. (72 Hun, 611) fairly illustrates the facts upon which the rule laid down in that class of cases is based. In that case the defendant, under a contract with the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company, delivered its cars loaded with coal upon the top of a trestle of the canal company, and there left them. The cars were to be taken by a contractor of the canal company and run down the trestle by the use of the brake to a pocket, where they were to be unloaded. The brake on one car was so defective that the car could not be controlled when it was started down the trestle, and an employee of the contractor working at the pocket was killed. It was held that the defendant was liable. In that case the decision was not put upon the ground that the defendant had been accustomed to place cars without defective brakes upon the trestle, and that plaintiff’s intestate relied upon the belief that such custom would be continued. It is apparent that such ground of liability would not be tenable. If it had appeared that the defendant in that case habitually placed cars upon the trestle with defective brakes, it would have been equally liable. Evidence of that fact would have tended to establish defendant’s negligence, and not its freedom from negligence. The logical and very correct ground of that decision is that by the contract with the canal company the implied (if not express) duty rested upon the defendant to furnish cars reasonably safe to be used for the purpose intended, and that such duty extended to all persons lawfully engaged in carrying out such purpose. In that case, if the defendant had expressly contracted with the canal company to deliver to it upon its trestle 100 defective cars, loaded with coal to be unloaded by ,the canal company, and had specifically pointed out such defects, it could not be claimed that the canal company or
The .other cases cited by the learned counsel for the respondent (Hoosier Stone Co. v. Louisville, N. A. & C. R. Co., [Sup. Ct. Ind.] 31 N. E. Rep. 365 ; Moon v. Northern Pac. R. Co., [Sup. Ct. Minn.] 48 N. W. Rep. 679; Coughtry v. Globe Woolen Co., supra; Gerbig v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co., 75 Hun, 605), and many others ■which might be cited, were all decided upon the same principle. Upon examination it will be found that in each one of the cases "there' was a contractual duty, either express or implied, resting upon the defendant to perform, some act the non-p.erformance of which caused the accident; or that by some act of omission or commission a situation was created which was imminently dangerous to .human life.
We think no case can be found in which it has been held that a diability arises because of the non-performance of ah act not imposed "by contract, express or implied, simply because it has customarily "been performed and its performance discontinued.
In the case of Nicholson v. Erie Railway Co. (41 N. Y. 525) it : appeared that the defendant had a branch track running from its main track across and into the premises of an. iron company, which was owned jointly by tliem and was used principally in supplying ■ coal to the iron company’s works. Persons in the vicinity.of the branch track were in the habit of crossing it in going to and from -the premises of the iron company. This was the habit of the plainHff’s intestate, who had been in the employ of the iron company. ■ On the day in question four empty cars and a car loaded' with coal • were standing on the branch track, and as the plaintiff’s intestate was crossing in front of the loaded car a sudden gust of wind blew • the empty cars against the loaded car and it was pushed against the plaintiff’s intestate and caused his death. It appeared that the ■ defendant had been in the habit of setting the brakes upon cars left upon the branch track, but that it did not do so upon the day in ques- • Hon. The court charged the jury that it was the duty of the defendant • to set the brakes, or otherwise fasten the cars when they were left
In the case of Sutton v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (66 N. Y. 243) the plain tiff’s.intestate was employed in a foundry, and he and the other employees were accustomed to cross the defendant’s tracks at a certain point. It was the custom of the defendant to disconnect cars and allow them by their own momentum to pass the foundry and then to set the brake in order to hold them. in place. The plaintiff’s intestate came out of the foundry as the disconnected cars passed, crossed the track and then stopped, and to avoid another train stepped back upon the track, when he was struck and killed by the disconnected cars, which in consequence of being on a down grade, and the failure of the brakeman to apply the brake, had started backward. It was held that the refusal of the court to charge that the defendant owed no'duty to the deceased to set the brake, or otherwise fasten the cars, was error, and that the plaintiff was not entitled to. recover. (Morris v. Brown, 111 N. Y. 318.)
The case at bar does not fall within the lino of. cases arising between employee and employer, in which the rule is laid down that where an employer adopts a particular method of doing work and habitually performs it in that manner, which is relied,,upon by the employee, and then changes the method or manner of doing the work without notice to the employee, and the employee thereby sustains injury, he may recover damages therefor. Such rule is reasonable and is based upon the theory that there is an implied agreement upon- the part of the employer to continue to do the work as it has been customarily performed, until notice of a change has been given to the employee. In this' case the relation of employer and employee did not exist between, the defendant and the plaintiff, and the rules of law defining the duties of parties sustaining that relation has no application.
The conclusion is reached that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, for the reason that the defendant was under no obligation to continue the custom of setting the brake upon the southerly car; that it was at liberty to discontinue the practice at any time, and
But, independently of the views to which expression has already been given, we are of the opinion that it was the duty of the defendant, when it placed the cars at the elevator, to so secure them that-they would remain in their places until the plaintiff and those employed with him entered upon the performance of their labors; but that, it was not the duty of the defendant to so secure the cars that each one should remain in its place while the cars next to it . were being removed by the plaintiff and those employed with him in the performance of their work. Ho such duty was imposed upon the defendant by the terms of its contract with the plaintiff’s employer, and no such duty was imposed upon the defendant by any custom appearing from the- evidence given on the trial. .
We are also of the opinion that it was the duty of the plaintiff and those employed with him in the performance of their work to see that the cars were so secured that each one would remain in its place while those next to it were being removed. Under these- rules of duty clearly the accident resulted, not from any negligence of the defendant, but from the want of proper care on the part of the plaintiff, and those employed, with him, which, constituted contributory negligence.
It follows that the judgment and order appealed from should be-reversed and a new trial' granted, with costs to the appellant to-abide event.
Adams, P. J., and Williams, J., concurred in result upon last: ■ two grounds; Spring, J., concurred in. result in' memorandum Laughlin, J., dissented.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the reversal on the ground that the proof does not satisfactorily establish that there was an unvarying practice or custom by the defendant’s trainmen to set the brakes on the rear car of each string left at the defendant’s elevatcuv
Judgment and order reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event. -