140 N.Y.S. 249 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
This action is brought to recover the pecuniary injury resulting to the next of kin of Felix Tengstrom by reason of his death, alleged to be due to defendants’ negligence. It was submitted to the jury as an action under the common-law rule of servant against master.
The circumstances connected with the caving in of the excavation made for the construction of a sewer in Gold street, in the borough of Brooklyn, and from which the death of plaintiff’s intestate resulted, have been considered by this court in the cases of Brady v. City of New York and Di Crescenti v. City of New York (149 App. Div. 816). The complaint in this action charges defendants, the contractors engaged in the construction of said sewer, with culpable neglect of «their duty to provide their employees with a safe place to work, through failure to properly shore and brace the sides of the excavation so as to prevent the subsidence thereof. The particular act or omission relied upon by plaintiff in the evidence introduced in her behalf was in permitting cracks or openings to appear and remain between the planks constituting the sheathing at the sides of the trench, through which openings sand sifted in considerable quantities, causing a vacant space back of the sheathing, denominated a “void.” After a time these voids, increasing in number and extent, the surrounding earth suddenly subsided, causing great and unusual lateral pressure, not only upon the sheathing but upon the supporting-rangers and braces, and the whole structure fell, involving plaintiff’s intestate and some of his fellow-workmen in the consequent ruin. But upon that branch of the case the learned court at Trial Term charged the jury, and, so far as this record discloses, without objection upon plaintiff’s part, as follows*. “ There is some evidence here of sand coming through the plank
It follows that we have here a case where the finding of the jury must have for its only support the fact of the caving in of the trench under the surrounding circumstances, and the failure of defendants to offer a satisfactory explanation therefor. Not only have we here presented the anomalous situation of an instruction by the trial court that plaintiff is not entitled to a verdict upon her own theory of the case, but the theory upon which the jury was permitted to find a verdict depends upon an erroneous ruling as to the law. In the Di Crescenti Case (supra) this court held that as between defendants the contractors and a workman, one of their employees, the happening of this accident, viewed in the light of the surrounding circumstances, did not raise a presumption of negligence. It is but fair to the learned trial court to say that this case was tried before the decisions in the Brady case and the Di Crescenti case had been handed down; but, for the error above referred to in the submission of this case to the jury, the judgment and the order denying a motion for a new trial must be reversed and a new trial granted,.costs to abide the event. ■
Jenks, P. J., Bjrschberg, Woodward and Rich, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.