102 F.2d 432 | 2d Cir. | 1939
This action comes back to us after a second trial; this time on appeal from a judgment for the plaintiff entered on the verdict of a jury. Our former opinion sets out the general outline of the case in enough detail, and we shall not repeat it. Pieczonka v. Pullman Company, 2 Cir., 89
The defence of contributory negligence lay with the defendant (§ 265, N.Y. Civil Practice Act) as did that of assumption of risk. As to the last, it is plain that an ignorant sandblaster was in no position to know what sort of mask would best protect him; he must take what was issued on the assumption that it was all he needed. As to contributory negligence, we think that, though the defendant’s evidence was competent, it was not a bar, even if the jury had believed the witnesses. Three superiors of the deceased swore that they had come upon him many times working without his mask, and had rebuked him for it. A fellow workman, Kelley, said that he had often seen him without it and heard him rebuked, and that he would then wear it “for a few days”. The most that this proved was that he did not wear it as much as he should have, and it is true that while he did not, he had only himself to thank for the dust which filled his lungs. But if the mask furnished him gave him less protection than it should have, he might still have recovered for any injury he suffered while he did use it, and there was every probability that this was substantial. No doubt, this means that the defence was a bar only in case he did not use it at all; but we need not shrink at that conclusion.
The last point is that the plaintiff failed to prove how many years of the deceased’s life were cut off because of his exposure after July 5, 1929. The defendant argues that, as she put in no evidence on this issue, the judge ought to have directed a verdict in its favor. This would be true, if the plaintiff had the burden of proof; but we think she did not, and that the defendant did. On the first appeal we discussed two possible views which courts might take of such a wrong as this: one, that each invasion of the plaintiff’s person was a fresh tort; the other, that the tort
Judgment affirmed.