25 A.D. 465 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The following is the opinion of Yeoman, J.:
The question presented upon this motion isWas the nonsuit right ? The plaintiff’s intestate, John Ulrich,. was a section hand upon the road of the defendant. The defendant was constructing an overhead bridge across its track upon a. highway in the country. This work was being done by a gang of carpenters in change of a foreman. The bridge was-to be, when constructed, about twenty feet above the track and to be supported by abutments at the ends and two piers, one on each side of the track. These piers were of hemlock timbers and consisted óf a cap and'bottom sill, each about thirty-two feet long, and six by eight inches, and three posts about twenty feet long, each eight by eight inches. At this place the road ran through a cut with sloping banks. The gang of carpenters placed one of the piers with its base where it was to permanently rest near the track, and with its top upon the bank. They raised the top about four feet from the bank and blocked it up. They attached to the cap sill a tackle, carried it across the track and attached it to the body of a large tree upon the top of the opposite bank, so that the hitch upon the tree was about twenty feet above . -the track. They then attached one end of another tackle to the .first, and its other end to the rail of the track. The hitch at the. rail was made by a chain, the links of which, were of one-quarter to . three-eigliths inch iron. This chain was passed under the rail from the outside and looped about a bar placed against’ the rail on the inside. The gang of sectionmen to which the deceased belonged, and also the-gang of sectionmen belonging to the section .upon which the bridge was being built, were called, upon, while, matters were in this condition, to help raise this pier. They were ordered to take hold of the-cap sill and lift and to use whatever they could get hold of to assist them. The deceased provided himself with a piece of board- or scantling, and others did the same. They distributed themselves along the cap sill upon the bank,, which was sloping and slippery from recent rains. S.everal men began pulling
There were no pike poles present at the time and there is no evidence as to whether or not the defendant had provided the gang of carpenters with any, or with any chain other than the one used. There was proof tending to show that it was not a safe or proper thing to put men behind this pier-when raising it with tackle, without providing them with pike poles or with something else which could be used as a brace to prevent the pier from falling in case the tackle gave way. The proof also showed that the pier could have been properly raised by using a “ jig pole or shear pole ” without endangering the men. The tackle was not hitched so as to-draw at right angles with the pier, but there was no evidence tending to show that this contributed to the accident, except as it, might be inferred that more strain was put upon the chain by reason of this. There was no evidence as to the condition of the broken link of the chain except that “ it had just parted.”
It is clear that the nonsuit cannot be sustained upon the question of the deceased’s contributory negligence. The plaintiff claims that the jury should have been permitted to say whether or not the defendant was chargeable with negligence because of the manner in which the pier was being raised, because of the breaking of the chain, because the men were put under the pier without protection, and because the place upon the bank where, they were directed to. work was sloping and slippery. There was no evidence tending to show that either the slope of the bank or its slippery condition contributed to the accident. There is nothing to show that any of the appliances used were defective in any manner. The chain broke, but there is no evidence tending to show that it was a defective chain, neither is there any evidence to show what strain it ought to have borne nor what strain it was subjected to. There is nothing to show the weight of the pier, and it is a necessary' result of
The question arises, was the master remiss in his duty in any of these matters ? “ The liability of the master, when the negligence was not his personal act or omission, but the immediate act or omission of a servant, turns, as was said in Crispin v. Babbitt (81 N. Y. 516, 521), upon, the character of the act, and this was but the enunciation of the established doctrine in this State upon the subject. If the co-servant, whose act caused the injury, was at the time representing the master in doing the master’s duty, the master is liable; if, on the other hand, he was simply performing the work of a servant, in his character as a servant or employee merely, the master is not. liable. The injury in the case last supposed would, as between the-master and the servant sustaining the injury, be attributable solely to the immediate author and not to the master. In harmony with, the general principle that the character of the act is the decisive-test," it has been' repeatedly decided in this court that the fact that the person whose negligence caused the injury was a servant of a-higher grade than -the servant injured, or that the latter was subject, to the direction or control of the former, and was engaged at the^ time in executing the orders of the former, does not take the case out of the operation of the general rule, nor make the master liable.”1 .(Loughlin v. State of New York 105 N. Y. 159.)
In Mahoney v. The Vacuum Oil Company (76 Hun, 579) tlie'fore-. man in charge of the work in hand deemed it advisable to place men over a hole in the floor. He placed a plank across it and put them upon it to assist with the work. The plank was not strong enough for the purpose and broke. It was held in that case; that the master was not chargeable with the act of his.foreman. In a like case (Butterworth v. Clarkson, 3 Misc. Rep. 338) the court said: “ There is absolutely no evidence to support a finding that thé plánk was furnished by the defendants for the use to which it was put by the foreman. The plank was applied by the foreman to a use that was a detail of the business within his discretion and judgment in the management of the work ; for an injury resulting from such an act the defendants- are not liable!”
It is proper to observe that all that class of cases which turn upon defective appliances or materials having been used are not applicable to this case. Whatever Avas used was, so far as the proof shows, good of its kind. The same is true of the cases in which harm came because of the unsafe condition of the place in which the -work was being done. In this case the harm came from the unsafe manner of doing the Avork. The fact that the foreman put the men in a dangerous place is not a matter affecting the master if the danger arises out of the manner of performing the detail of the work. In Loughlin v. State of New York (supra) the foreman put an employee in a dangerous place under a bank of earth Avhich the foreman himself had loosened so that it fell upon
When the master intrusts others with the execution of his work, it is his duty to furnish them with proper tools, appliances and equipment for such work. If, therefore, the defendant sent the gang of carpenters out to do this work without other tools and equipment than those described the jury might justly charge it with the results of the manner in which the foreman executed the undertaking. In this case, however, there is no evidence as to what was or was not furnished to these carpenters with which to prosecute their work. All that appears is that they liad in actual use the appliances described. There was no attempt to prove whether or. not others were provided for the use of this gang. It would be sheer assumption for a jury, in the face of our common knowledge with reference to such matters, to say that none others had been provided.
The motion should, therefore, be denied, with ten dollars costs.