89 N.Y.S. 612 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff has obtained a small verdict for personal injuries; received from the breaking of a scaffold on which he was working in the defendant’s employment on January 16, 1901. His work was to carry brick and mortar to masons who were engaged in building a chimney in the construction of a Queen Anne cottage. The chimney was nearly finished, the scaffold in question being near the top of it. The scaffold lacked one plank and the plaintiff was directed to bring up One — he says the only one which was left for that purpose — and to place it upon the supports. He did so, and then stepped upon the plank when it broke under him causing-him to fall some twenty-five or thirty feet.
The plank was taken possession of by the defendant on the day of' the accident and was received in evidence and exhibited to the jury on the trial. The defendant testified that it was then in about the same condition as when it broke, except that it had aged a little and the break did not look as fresh and bright as at first; and one of his witnesses, the one who had directed the plaintiff to use the plank,, testified that he would not consider a plank which was-split through in several places to be a proper, safe plank to use for scaffolding-purposes, and. admitted that the plank in question was so badly split at the time of the trial that you could see through it in places. Another witness for the defendant testified that he supposed th.e plank was split more at the time of the trial than at the time of the accident, and while conceding that it was not as safe as it-wou-ld have been if it had no splits in it, insisted that if was safe to use, and “ as good as they are, as a rule.” , Assuming that the burden rested.
Under the present state of the law the breaking of the plank unexplained would make a prima facie case of negligence on the part of the defendant. (McLaughlin v. Eidlitz, 50 App. Div. 518; Walters v. Fuller Company, 74 id. 388 ; 82 id. 254, 258; Wingert v. Krakauer, 76 id. 34; Johnson v. Roach, 83 id. 351; Stewart v. Ferguson, 164 N. Y. 553.) Section 18 of the Labor Law (Laws of 1897, chap. 415) imposes upon the master the duty of furnishing safe scaffolding for the use of his servants, and section 19 provides that such scaffolding shall be so constructed as to bear four times the maximum weight required to be placed thereon when in use. Referring to these provisions of the statute in the case of Stewart v. Ferguson (supra), the Court of Appeals held that equally whether the cause of the fall of a scaffold was or was not ascertained the law had the effect (p. 555) to “ enlarge the duty of the master or employer and extend it to responsibility for the safety of the scaffold itself and thus for the want of care in the details of its construction.” The court further said (p. 556): “ Section 18 is a positive prohibition laid upon the master without exception upon account of his ignorance or the carelessness of his servants. The evidence tended to show that this scaffold was not overloaded, but was bearing the weight usually required in the performance of the labor for which it was an appliance. Prima facie it was so constructed as to bear less than onefou/rth the weight required by section 19. Its fall, in the absence of evidence of other producing cause, points to the omission of the duty enjoined by the statute upon the defendant to the plaintiff in its construction, and points to it with that reasonable certainty which usually tends to produce conviction in the mind in tracing events back to their causes, and thus creates a presumption. It is circumstantial evidence, and if it does convince the jury, it justifies their verdict.”
All concurred, except Woodward, J., who read for reversal, with whom Jerks, J., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting): I cannot see my way clear to concur in the conclusion reached by my associates in this court, nor in the reasoning by which such con elusion is reached. The accident in this case occurred before the passage of the Employers’ Liability Act (Laws of 1902, chap. 600), and I am persuaded that under a fair construction of the Labor Law (Laws of 1897, chap. 415, §§ 18, 19, as amd. by Laws of 1899, chap. 192) the plaintiff has failed to establish a cause of action. Taking the plaintiff’s own story, he was employed by the defendant as a mason’s helper,, two other men being employed upon the same work, which consisted at the time of the accident in constructing a chimney for a Queen Anne cottage. There is no evidence in the case that either of the masons had any authority over the conduct of the plaintiff, except that one of them assumed to tell him what to do. There is no evidence that the plaintiff owed any duty of obe- ' dienee to the orders of this mason, or that the latter had any authority to hire or discharge him, or that the defendant recognized this mason as in any manner representing him upon this work. So far as I am able to discover the defendant had no special representative upon this simple job of constructing- a' chimney; there were two masons and a helper, whose duty it was to co-operate in completing the work, with no one of them having any authority over the other. During the .construction of this chimney it had been necessary to construct and reconstruct a scaffold, and there is no question here in reference to the manner of constructing, for the accident complained of did not result from any fault in construction, but from the breaking of a plank thirteen feet long, two inches thick and
Where is the negligence of the master in this case % No scaffolding or other mechanical contrivance broke or fell, if we assume that under the provisions of sectiofi 18 of the Labor Law it was the duty of the master to construct and reconstruct a safe scaffolding. A plank which had every appearance' of being sound, and which even the investigation of the trial failed to show was defective in any particular which could have been discovered by the exercise of any reasonable care on the part of the master, broke and the plaintiff was injured, but something more than this is necessary to establish negligence. The duty of the master to use reasonable care to furnish safe materials and appliances does not require that he should subject every plank, every stick of timber, every bolt and every nail to an actual test under a given strain ; this duty is satisfied by taking the degree of care which a reasonably prudent man would or should use to protect his own life and limb under the same circumstances, and the evidence in this case is that the plank which was furnished and which the plaintiff himself, with several years of experience in similar work, handled, was just such a plank as would be used by any one of the'witnesses called, and that it did not disclose, even after the, break, any latent defects which a reasonable inspection would
Unless, therefore, there was a duty resting on the master tó furnish a scaffolding which was absolutely safe in all its details under all circumstances, it is difficult to see wherein the master has failed in any duty which he owed to the plaintiff. Section 18 of the Labor Law changes the common-law rule to some extent, and it is, perhaps, too late to suggest the proper construction, limiting it to the exact language used, and making no greater change than its language requires, (Rosin v. Lidgerwood Manufacturing Co., 89 App. Div. 245, 247, and authorities there cited.) This section provides : “ A person employing or directing another to perform labor of any kind in the election, repairing, altering or painting of a house, building or structure shall not furnish or erect, or cause to be furnished or erected for the performance of such labor, scaffolding, hoists, stays, ladders or other mechanical contrivances which are unsafe, unsuitable or impropér, and which are not so Constructed, placed and operated as to give proper protection to the life and limb of a person so employed or engaged.” Does this contemplate anything more than that where the master undertakes to furnish a scaffolding, or where it is his duty to furnish a scaffolding, he shall use reasonable care to see that the same is safe % Is there any duty resting upon him to make it absolutely safe, regardless of defects in materials which he could not discover by the exercise of any reasonable degree of care % I think the law is not to be construed as requiring more than this, for it is not to be presumed that the Legislature intended to deny the equal protection of equal laws to any citizen of this State, and reasonable care is all the law has a right to exact of any one in his ordinary relations with his fellow-men, having in mind the obligation to use care commensurate with the dangers to be anticipated from a failure to perform the duty.
If the duty is that of reasonable care, can it be that when the master has provided materials which are safe, fit and proper for the construction of a scaffolding, so far as any inspection of them which
Jenks, J., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs. '