66 N.Y.S. 1021 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The defendant in its work of railroad construction placed its windlass on the sidewalk of a city street in front of the house of the plaintiff, in a populous quarter where children were accustomed to play in the street. The windlass was about four feet high and three feet wide, working with a drum and with a small and a large cogwheel. The defendant left it about ten o’clock on Sunday morning, so tied that the drum and cogwheels could not be turned unless the tiers were removed. On .Monday evening lads of that neighborhood cut the rope or cord tiers, procured and wound a child’s skipping rope around the drum, and then pulled and relaxed such rope, thus revolving the drum and giving play to the cogwheels. At this time.the plaintiff, aged between five and six years, clambered up to the top of the windlass, caught his foot in the revolving cogwheels and suffered an injury.
The question of a nuisance per se is not in this case. The defendant testified that it was using the windlass in a proper place and for a proper purpose. This was not questioned by the plaintiff, who, upon the trial, conceded that the windlass “ was properly and lawfully engaged upon this public street in the construction of this elevated railroad structure. That the windlass in question was a proper appliance to be used by the defendant with other mechanical appliances in elevating materials used in the construction of this elevated railroad which they might lawfully use in a proper way and used upon the street surface. That it was an appropriate appliance to hoist with; that the plaintiff
The appellant confines his attack upon the judgment to the single point that the trial court should have dismissed the complaint on
I think that the judgment must be reversed.
All concurred, except Bartlett, J., absent.
' Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Sic.