144 N.Y.S. 843 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
The plaintiff sues his employer under the Employer's’ Liability Law for damages resulting from an accident happening during the course of the work. In our opinion the evidence fully justified the recovery, and we should not find it necessary to say anything further save for a question raised by the defendant as to the sufficiency of the notice of claim. On May 29, 1912, plaintiff served a notice of claim under the Employers’ Liability Law, and on June 3, 1912, served a complaint in which he referred to and relied upon the notice served on May twenty-ninth. On June first the defendant mailed to plaintiff’s attorneys a demand for an amplified notice of claim. This was received by plaintiff’s attorney on June third, the same day that the complaint was served, but whether before or after such service does not appear. On June sixth plaintiff served the amplified notice demanded by defendant.
Defendant’s contention is that as by the terms of the statute the amended notice superseded the original notice the latter can no longer serve as a basis for a recovery under the statute, and that the amended notice cannot so serve because it did not come into existence until after the action was begun.
Section 201 of the Labor Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 31; Laws of 1909, chap. 36), as amended by chapter 352 of the Laws of 1910, so far as applicable to the point now under consideration, reads as follows: “Notice to be served. No action for recovery of compensation for injury or death under this article shall be maintained unless notice of the time, place and cause of the injury is given to the employer within one hundred and twenty days and the action is commenced within one year after the occurrence of the accident causing the injury or death. The notice required by this section shall be in writing and signed by the person injured or by some one in his behalf, but if from physical or mental incapacity it is impossible for the person injured to give notice within the time provided in this section, he may give the same within ten days after such incapacity is removed. In case of his death without having given such notice, his executor or administrator may give such notice within sixty days after his appointment, but no notice
What the statute requires is that, in order to avail himself of the act, a claimant must serve within a specified time a “notice of the time, place and cause of the injury.” Much has been written as to the proper method of stating the cause of the injury, but it is not necessary to discuss that question now beyond remarking that in our opinion the notice first served fully complied with the requirements of the statute. Prior "to the amendment of 1910 an injured employee was obliged to stand or fall upon the sufficiency of the notice first served; he . had no means of knowing until the trial whether or not its sufficiency would be questioned, and if upon the trial it was successfully questioned he lost the benefit of the act. Thus many meritorious cases were thrown out of court owing solely to inadvertent defects in the notice of claim, The purpose of the amendment of 1910 was to prevent this. By that amendment the employer was required to give prompt notice to the employee if he considered the original notice insufficient or defective in any of the essential subjects to be included in the notice, to wit, the time, place and cause of the injury. Thereupon the claimant was permitted to serve an amended claim, which should supersede or take the place of the original notice and have the same effect as an original notice. This ■ amendment was evidently adopted wholly for the benefit of
The service of an amended notice after the complaint has been served does not, as we think, impose upon a plaintiff the obligation to discontinue his action and commence over again. The statute does not so provide and we see no necessity for so holding. The. moment a notice of claim has been served the claimant’s right of action has been perfected. It is not the wording of the notice of claim, but the service of such a notice which gives the right of action under the statute. Before the amendment of 1910 if the notice was defective it might be declared a nullity on the trial, and thus leave the plaintiff with no cause of action under the statute. Now, however phrased, the notice is good unless an amplified or amended notice is demanded. When such an amplified or amended notice has been served it supersedes the original in the sense that it takes its place, and makes that perfect which theretofore was imperfect, and the action may go on as if the perfect notice had been originally served. This construction gives full effect to the statute and affects unfavorably no material interest of either party.
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Laughlin and Clarke, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.