31 App. D.C. 420 | D.C. Cir. | 1908
delivered the opinion of the Court:
1. The first error assigned is on the refusal of the court to
The grant or refusal of leave to amend is a matter within the discretion of the trial court. Schrot v. Schoenfeld, 23 App. D. C. 421, 426; Chunn v. City & Suburban R. Co. 23 App. D. C. 551, 562. We perceive no abuse of that discretion in this instance. The case had been at-issue since February 25, 1907, and no reason appeared why the plaintiff waited until the trial
2. The question raised on the exception taken on the action of the court in directing a verdict for the defendant cannot be determined on the application of the New York statute of 1897, before mentioned. The court rightly held that it could not apply because there was no evidence whatever tending to show that the injury was occasioned by any defect in the scaffolding erected for the performance of plaintiff’s labor, or in any hoist, stay, ladder, or other mechanical contrivance used therein.
3. Tested by the principles of the common law, the evidence was insufficient to show actionable negligence committed by the defendant. An immense building was in course of construction. Plaintiff’s special work was at the extreme end of the same, riveting connections with the outer girder. His place of work was upon a scaffold where he appears to have been reasonably safe under the ordinary conditions of his particular labor. It does not appear from the evidence that he or his immediate colaborers were required or expected to walk over the iron framework in order to reach the scaffold provided for them, or to procure tools for the performance of their labor, or that the defendant undertook to lay boards across the beams for the purpose of enabling any of its employees to walk about over the iron framework. How the board came to be lying on the beams, or by whom, or for what purpose, it was laid there, does not appear. Por aught that appears, the boards mentioned in the evidence may have been brought and laid by some of the workmen engaged in the building, for their own convenience and
Again, there was no evidence to show that the board, if laid across the beam, by the master’s authority, for workmen to stand or walk upon at their convenience, was in such a defective condition as that the master ought to be charged with negligence in not observing it. Looney v. Metropolitan R. Co. 200 U. S. 480, 486, 50 L. ed. 564, 568, 26 Sup. Ct. Rep. 303. It was said in that case: “To hold, a master responsible, a servant must show that the appliances and instrumentalities furnished were defective. A defect cannot be inferred from the mere fact of injury. There must be some substantive proof of the negligence. Knowledge of the defect or some omission of duty in regard to it must be shown.”
There being no evidence on, which a verdict for the plaintiff could rest, the court was right in directing the jury to find for the defendant. The judgment must therefore be affirmed, with costs. Affirmed.
A writ of error to the Supreme Court of the United States was allowed June 2, 1908.