120 N.Y.S. 1059 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
On this appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in an action to recover damages for personal injuries, the appellant contends that the action was not brought upon the theory of any common-law liability, but under the provisions of the Employers’ Liability Act (Laws of 1902, chap. 600), and that there was no proof that the notice required by the Employers’ Liability Act was served within the statutory time, and that for this reason the complaint should have been dismissed, while the respondent as urgently insists that this is a common-law action and endeavors to sustain the judgment upon this theory. In his first point the plaintiff’s counsel says that the “ action was brought under the common-law theory as well as pleading an action under the Employers’ Liability Act,” and at page 11 of his brief he says that “ this brings us again to the statement above, that aside from the question of assumption of risk, the Employers’ Liability Act has little to do with this controversy, but the action is one at common law.”
We are clearly of the opinion that the plaintiff’s contention is right; that the action was one purely at common law, and ftir this
Having in mind the open and obvious danger of a slippery floor, such as the plaintiff’s witnesses testify had been maintained for a period of six years, more or less, and the facts above stated, it is important to consider the testimony of the plaintiff to determine if, at common law, he had made a case entitling him to go to the jury, this question having been presented by the motion to dismiss. He told of his position in the factory at the machine which he was operating, and that he started to walk down the passageway,, about four feet wide, between a row of machines, to the toilet room. He says: “As I was going over to the toilet I told Hr. Jordan; I went up through the aisle; well, I slipped on this plate. The plate was between the aisles, crossing. * * * The size of this plate was three by two. ' I stepped on the plate, this iron plate. * * * I say I slipped on that; well, I didn’t take notice of what was on the plate at that time. * * * Well, after I fell and got up, I seen the oil there; that’s all. The .oil was on this plate. ' This plate extended across the passageway. * * * After I got up I seen the oil. * * * There was. oil there about three by one ; three foot one way and a foot the other way; a ring of oil about three foot long and a foot wide.” The plaintiff described the way he fell into the gears of the machine, and explained to the court that the iron plates were placed in the floor for the purpose of holding the bobbins ; that they were so heavy that they would pass through an ordinary wood floor, and then, on cross-examination, he said: “ That same condition had been going on all the years I was there. I was not familiar with it and did not know all about the conditions.” He was asked, “Well, you knew' all about this plate being there and the bobbins dropping on it ? ” The court interposed, “ He told yon he knew of the existence of it for a year.” The defendant’s counsel then continued, and the witness responded, “ That part of it, about dropping the bobbins on
The notice served upon the defendant does not give notice of any liability under the Employers’ Liability Act; it is merely a notice of the common-law right of action which was litigated, and it was. not properly in the' case, though it may be questioned whether the objections urged covered this point-. At any rate, the plaintiff now holds that it was a common-law action, and this is what was pleaded and litigated, and as the. plaintiff, under his evidence, had not established á common-law right to recover it was error to submit the question to the jury, and the judgment entered upon the verdict must, with the order appealed from, be reversed, if the integrity of the law of negligence is to be preserved.
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Burk, Thomas and Rich, JJ., concurred; IItrschbe'rg, P. J., dissented.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.