143 N.Y.S. 636 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
The plaintiff, while making fast a boat at the Thirty-ninth Street ferry, borough of Brooklyn, at about five-twenty-five p. M. on Tuesday, November 14, 1911, was struck by a fragment of a glass globe that fell from defendant’s lamp that hung outside of and some seven feet aside the pathway on the ferry bridge. The top of the globe is fastened by three screws into a ring thrust into a collar, where three .bolts engage three slots in it, and then turned so that its rim rests on the bolts. A chain connects the globe to the lamp for the sole purpose of holding the globe when detached from its fitting in ■ the lamp. After the accident defendant’s inspector found the ring detached from the globe on a' beam which was beneath the lamp. The lamp was of the most approved type and was inspected. The lamp was trimmed on the Saturday before the accident and was examined every night by the inspector. The trimming process involves the lowering of the lamp by the rope, the removal of the outer and inner globes, cleaning and refurnishing with carbon, the restoration of the parts, the return of the globe to its place and rehoisting. The trimmer stated that he found the lamp and globe in November in good condition. That is the total of his evidence of care. The inspector on the night of the accident found the lamp burning with the inner globe intact, but the outer globe was gone, the ring on the behm beneath and the hook on the chain bent. In short, the globe by some force had been turned so that the slots in the ring dropped off the bolts, and nothing was broken save as stated. The ring is not held in place in the lamp by set screws, and it does not appear specifically whether collision with the ferry bridge could disturb the ring if thoroughly locked in place, nor whether, if the trimmer failed to twist the lamp so as to. make a complete interlocking, the globe could be dismantled by continued vibration.
It is useless in a rational investigation of such a happening to conjecture mysterious causes. Considering the matter practically, it is a just conclusion that some hand turned the globe so that it fell or that it was jarred out of place by the external force. There is an entire absence of statement of any experience relating to similar accidents. But if a meddler did not
The judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Jenks, P. J., Stapleton and Putnam, JJ., concurred; Burr, J., not voting.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.