78 A.D. 163 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
This action was brought to recover damages for negligence in causing the death of plaintiff’s intestate. The defendant was engaged in erecting the iron framework of a power house for the Manhattan Railway Company on the north side of Seventy-fourth street near Avenue A in Hew York city. The deceased was walking in an easterly direction on the south side of Seventy-fourth street, opposite the place where defendant was erecting the framework, when he was struck on the head and instantly crushed to death by the falling of an iron column about seventy-four feet in length and weighing about ten tons.
The place where the deceased was walking at the time of the accident was a public street, and he was lawfully thereon. The defendant admits that the question of contributory negligence of the deceased was properly submitted to the jury, and that their finding upon that point cannot be disturbed. The questions, therefore, presented upon this appeal are confined to defendant’s negligence and to certain exceptions taken to the admission of evidence over the defendant’s objections.
At the moment of the accident the defendant was engaged in lifting a steel column seventy-four feet in length and weighing
There was a sharp dispute in the testimony as to whether the pennant line, which was wound around the iron girder, was protected from being cut upon the sharp edges of the iron. The testimony upon the part of the plaintiff tended to establish that there was no such protection, and that at the place where the rope parted it presented the appearance of having been cut as with an axe. It was a sharp clean cut, and the jury were authorized to find from the testimony of the witnesses for the plaintiff who spoke upon this subject that the rope was cut upon the edges of the iron. Upon the part of the defendant proof was given tending to establish that this iron girder was wrapped around with canvas and the rope wound around the girder over the canvas so as to prevent cutting, and that the rope did not part where it was wrapped around the girder, but some distance beyond, between the hook and the girder. The issues thus presented by the testimony were carefully submitted
Upon this branch of the case, therefore, it does not become necessary to discuss the other elements in which the defendant claimed to have exercised care and the plaintiff claims it to have been disregarded, for in the point suggested the vital question arises upon which negligence of the defendant could be predicated, and the finding of the jury thereon has established such fact against defendant’s contention. Aside from this question, however, is still another upon which this recovery can be sustained. The deceased was walking upon a public street and met his death through no fault of his own, but solely by reason of the acts of the defendant in carrying on the construction of the work. The method and manner in which this work was performed was laid before the jury in its entirety, and from the facts which were proven in the case the jury were authorized fairly to infer either a defective condition of the gin pole and the apparatus used for its support, or negligence in the method and manner of its operation. Where such proof is given the rule of res ipsa loquitur is made to obtain, a prima facie case of negligence is established and an obligation is imposed upon the defendant to explain its acts. (Mullen v. St. John, 57 N. Y. 567 ; Jones
It is quite true, as claimed by the defendant, that the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur is a rule of evidence. It is to be applied, however, in manner precisely the sanie as is all other evidence tending to establish a given proposition. When facts and circumstances are given in evidence, out of which arises the rule, then the party against whom it operates is called upon to explain, and, in the absence of sufficient explanation in destruction of the presumption, the question is to be submitted to the jury to be disposed of by them. (Griffen v. Manice, 166 N. Y. 188.)
The case of Welsh v. Murray (2 App. Div. 205), relied upon by the appellant, recognizes this rule and states the principle as enunciated in Morris v. Strobel & W. Co. (81 Hun, 1). In the Welsh Case (supra) the defendants were using a street in the construction of a sewer under a contract with the city of New York. They were, therefore, properly in the street. The plaintiff therein was not using the street as a highway, but was watching the work which the defendants were engaged in doing, and it was held that the defendants owed no duty to the plaintiff, as there was no contractual relation existing between them, and the plaintiff at the time was not making use of the street for purposes of passage. It is not necessary in all cases that a contractual relation exist in order that the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur should find application. In the present case the deceased was passing along the street, as was his legal right to do. The defendant owed him a duty not to make his use of the street dangerous. It did not rest upon any contractual relation between them, but upon the right of the deceased to make use of the street and upon the obligation of the defendant not to inflict injury upon him while there. When the defendant caused
The defendant further urges as ground of reversal an exception taken to the admission of certain testimony given by the witness Wright. The evidence disclosed that Wright was qualified to speak with respect to the construction, supports and operation of derricks. He had forty years’ experience in this country and in Scotland. He was examined and cross-examined at considerable length, covering the whole subject-matter of the mechanism of derricks, hoisting apparatus, supports and method of operation. Upon the direct examination he was asked the following question : “ Now, from your experience as a builder and rigger, what is the common means of guying a derrick for the purpose of raising heavy weights ? ” This was objected to as incompetent, irrelevant, immaterial, as calling for a conclusion, and not showing the existence of similar conditions as existed in the particular derrick. The witness had testified with respect to the particular structure which was here in operation, its rigging, construction and method of operation, and had shown himself to be fully conversant upon the subject. The evidence was material, as it bore directly upon the question as to whether the supports of the derrick were sufficient, and as bearing upon that proposition it was competent to prove the usual and ordinary method of support, which obtained in connection with the different forms of derricks used in hoisting heavy weights. The witness, therefore, was shown to be competent to speak, expert testimony upon the subject was admissible (Scandell v. Columbia Construction Co., 50 App. Div. 512), and the testimony which was given was competent and material. (Pursley v. Edge Moor Bridge Works, 56 App. Div. 71; affd. on appeal, 168 N. Y. 589.) This testimony fell within the first of the two classes into which the subject is divided
From all that appears in this testimony it is apparent that wire ropes would be as available for use in support of the gin pole as would manila ropes, and either might be used in support of a boom derrick as well as upon the particular structure. It seems to be evident, therefore, that testimony showing that wire rope or cable was generally used in support of such a structure was competent, and especially is this true where evidence was given tending to show that the particular rope which parted upon this occasion was of doubtful sufficiency for the purpose for which it was used.
Nothing appears in the case which would justify this court in interfering with the amount of the verdict. It has the support of testimony, and nothing appears to show that the jury were actuated in its rendition by any improper reason.
It follows that the judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Yan Brunt, P. J., O’Brien, Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.