74 N.Y.S. 196 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The place of the accident was a loop in the elevated railroad system of the defendant, where there were several tracks, signals, switches and a signal tower. For some weeks the Union Switch Company had been at work there for. the defendant putting up a signal tower, connecting switches and signals and interlocking tracks. The plaintiff’s intestate was a blacksmith who had been employed by the switch company in this work. There was a blacksmith’s forge at this place upon the surface of the defendant’s structure. The intestate had not been at work for about a week, but on the day of the accident he had returned to this place. The version of the plaintiff is that on this day her intestate was at his work. The version of the defendant is that he came back for work, but was told that he could not work on that day, but that he might be taken on the following morning or thereafter. The learned trial justice submitted the question to the jury, and I think that the evidence was sufficient to warrant a finding that the intestate was a workman for the switch company on the day of the accident.
If this was his status, the question arises : What was the obligation of the defendant to him ? In Dempsey v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (81 Hun, 156), the defendant contracted with G. to repair the roof of its train shed. ' G.’s sub-contractor employed ' plaintiff’s intestate. The defendant placed a tool car for the use of the contractor upon its track, and in this car the workmen kept their luncheons. The defendant knew of such particulars, and it appeared that the workmen went to and from this car through an opening between cars standing upon defendant’s track. The intestate while passing across the tracks was struck by a car which was “ shoved ” by a switchman so as to close the gap. The court, per Bradley, J. (Dwight, P. J., Lewis and Haight, JJ., concurring), said: “ In view of such facts, the deceased and his co-employees were not mere volunteers upon the defendant’s tracks. Their relation to the work required them to go to and from it, and in doing so they had rights which it was the duty of the defendant to recog
In Collins v. N. Y., N. H. & H. R. R. Co. (8 N. Y. St. Repr. 165) the defendants contracted with one to lay water pipes in its yard, and the intestate, who was in the employ of the contractor, had been spreading dirt between the tracks. While standing in the space between the lines of tracks he was struck by a car. The court said that the deceased was not a licensee. “ He had been in effect induced and requested by the defendants to come ripon the yard and work in it, for their benefit as well as his own. (Cordell v.
In Ominger v. N. Y. Cen. & Hudson R. R. R. Co. (4 Hun, 159), the plaintiff, an employee of the contractor with the defendant, while working about the track, was injured by a train of the defendant, and the court, per Learned, P. J., held that the plaintiff was not a mere licensee, but that he was there to fulfill a contract, a person on lawful business. (Citing Indermaur v. Dames, L. R. [2 C. P.] 311; Smith v. London & Saint Katharine Docks Co., 3 id. 326 ; Coughtry v. Globe Woolen Co., 56 N. Y. 124.)
In Young v. N. Y. C. R. R. Co. (30 Barb. 229), the plaintiff was in the employ of a contractor.for repairing defendant’s bridge, and while so engaged was injured by defendant’s cars. The court held that if the plaintiff was injured by the negligence of defendant’s servants he had a cause of action against the defendant, inasmuch as he “was lawfully there, engaged in the work he was employed to perform.” In Indermaur v. Dames (supra), a gasfitter, under contract to fix a gas apparatus on defendant’s premises, sent his workman, who fell through an open shaft. The court, per Kelly, C.' B., in affirming a judgment recovered by the workman against the defendant, adopted the language of Willes, J., below, who had said " We think that argument (that the plaintiff was a bare licensee) fails because the capacity in which the plaintiff was there was that of a person on lawful business in the course of fulfilling a contract in which both the plaintiff and defendant had an interest, and not upon bare permission,” holding that the obligation upon the defendant was the exercise of reasonable care. The learned opinion of Willes, J., though not reported in 2 Law Reports, Common Pleas, is found in full in Bigelow’s Cases on Torts (Student’s Series), 482. (See, too, Coughtry v. Globe Woolen Co., supra; Goodfellow v. Boston, Hartford & Erie R. R. Co., 106 Mass. 461.) Thompson on Negligence (2d ed., §§ 1839, 1840) states the rule thus : “ Persons lawfully at work in repairing a railway track, or in repairing a highway where it crosses a railway track, can not be expected to pursue their labors and at the same time maintain a constant lookout for an approaching train. They are passive and are not a source of danger to the train; those who are driving the train are
I think that the care required is such care as a man of ordinary experience and prudence would exercise under the circumstances.. This is the measure of the obligation as expressed in Indermaur v. Dames (supra), in Murphy v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 118 N. Y. 527, and in Stinson v. N. Y. C. R. R. Co., 32 id. 333. In the last case the court say: “ And the duty the company owed to him in the management of its trains was the exercise of that ordinary care which every man owes to his neighbor, to do him no injury by negligence while both are engaged in lawful pursuits, a duty which begins, and ends in the maxim 'sic utere tuo utnon alienum Icedas.’ ” In Murphy v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (supra), the court, per Haight, J.,.held that it was the duty of the defendants to use ordinary care and caution to prevent in juries ton car repairer of a connecting railroad corporation, discriminating the obligation from that which lay upon the defendant in Sutton v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (66 N. Y. 243) towards a mere licensee. (See, too, Conlan v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 74 Hun, 115 ; affd., 148 N. Y. 748.)
The plaintiff’s version of the accident may be summarized as. follows: Her intestate came from the tower house and crossed the tracks to his foreman, came back and stooped down to lift up “ some.thing ” which lay upon the cross ties, outside the rails but near them. At this place there were some projecting bars, used by the switch company, which the intestate was required to adjust, to bend into shape. He was about to lift up such a bar. at the time he stooped over. At this time the. locomotive of the defendant, running without a train of cars, approached. The deceased saw it and attempted to cross to a place of safety, but was too late. The engine was run-ping at a, speed of from fifteen to twenty miles an hour. There is
The version of the defendant is that the intestate was standing or Avalking towards the engine with his head down, doing nothing, and that he stepped onto the track when the locomotive was so close to him as to make the accident unavoidable, although the locomotive was running at a speed of not more than six miles an hour.
It appears that it was broad daylight and that the engineer knew that there were persons at work at this place. At the time of the accident he was on. the right side of the locomotive cab, but he did not see the intestate until after the accident. He testifies that he could see a mile and a half ahead; that if a man was stooping down picking up something he could see that man one hundred and fifty feet away; that he could see a man on the left side of the engine (the relative position of the intestate), if stooping down on the track, twenty feet away, and that if he had seen the intestate at this distance he could have stopped the locomotive. He also testifies that the left-hand side of the locomotive cab was the place for the fireman, who is supposed to keep watch on that side, but that at this particular time the fireman had just “got down” from the tender after taking coal. The fireman testifies that he was in the cab on his proper side, but that he could not say that he was in his. “ proper place; ” that he was not looking ahead, for he went to hang up his scoop. He says that it was his duty “ to cover that side of the track ” where the intestate was injured, and that “ in a certain way ” he “ was doing that at this time.” He further says that he was looking ahead before the accident, and that he did not know why he did not see the intestate, and that he could see three miles ahead when he was in position. I think that the question of the due care of the defendant was one for the jury.
If the jury found that the plaintiffs intestate at the time and place of the accident was a workman of the switch company then engaged in work incidental to his employment, I think that the question of his contributory negligence Avas also for the jury. I have said that there was evidence from which-the jury might have
■ A motion to direct a verdict.for the defendant was reserved, and upon the consideration of it and of the motion for a new trial on the minutes, the learned justice wrote an elaborate and learned opinion which expressed misgivings as to the correctness of the charge which he gave to the jury as to the legal obligation of the defendant, in view of Pollitt v. Kings County Elevated Railroad Co. (32 N. Y. St. Repr. 954 ; affd., 126 N. Y. 630), evidently regarding that case as a precedent rather than as an authority. He wrote that under that décision a verdict would have to be directed for the defendant were it not for our decision in De Boer v. Brooklyn Wharf Co. (51 App. Div. 289). I think that this case is not necessarily determined by Pollit's case. Examination of the record in that case shows that the learned trial justice, Mr. Justice Cullen, dismissed the complaint upon the motion made at the close of the case, on the ground that there was no evidence of negligence on the defendant’s part, and on the further ground that there was no evidence to show that plaintiff’s intestate was free from contributory negligence. Although Mr. Justice Cullen made no comments on granting the motion, I am sure that the eminent counsel for the appellant in that case was entirely correct in his statement upon bis brief at the
As I think that the case at bar does not necessarily turn upon the De Boer ease, inasmuch as the jury in this case were warranted in finding from the evidence that the status of the plaintiff’s intestate, at the time and place, was that of an employee of the Union Switch Company, there is no. reason for any discussion of that decision, for no request was made to change the obligation of the defendant
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Present — Goodrich, P. J., Bartlett, Woodward, IIirschberg and Jenks, JJ.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.