37 N.Y.S. 882 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
We do not think there is any evidence upon which the jury could have found that the defendants were negligent. Plaintiff seems to-have been employed by the Third Avenue Railroad Company to-keep the track of the company clear, and, if a car was coming' down, to watch and hold on to the boom of a derrick being used by the defendants, or one of them, in the construction of a sewer on.
Greenwald, a witness sworn for plaintiff, testified that on June 4,1891, he went up to this place, and saw the mast of the derrick lying on the track, and Welsh was lying there injured. He said he did not know how it fell, was not there when it happened. This witness further testified that he did not know much about the -construction of derricks, but that, this derrick was held in place by ■four wire ropes ; that the ropes that held the derrick up were lying ■down with the derrick; that “ when the derrick was lying down the ropes were lying on the ground too.” The witness further testified that he had sent Welsh up to this place, and gave him instructions -to look out for the work, but did not give him instructions to stand "up close to the derrick.
There was no contractual relation between the defendants and •this plaintiff. The defendants were constructing .a sewer under a ■contract made with the city of New York and were thus rightfully in the street, the plaintiff being employed by the railroad company to see that the track was kept clear, and to warn an approaching car if the track was obstructed by the work. And to entitle the plain"tiff to recover in this action it was necessary to allege and j>rove that "the defendants were in some way negligent in some duty that they •owed to the plaintiff. The plaintiff not being in the defendants’ •employ there was no duty to provide the plaintiff with proper tools and appliances with which to -do work that plaintiff was employed
We do not think that this is a case to which the maxim res ipso loqytAi/a/r was applicable. That rule has been applied in cases where an express duty exists to maintain a structure in such a condition that persons lawfully using a public street or highway shall not be injured. This is stated by the presiding justice, in the case of Morris v. Strobel & Wilken Co. (81 Hun, 3), as follows: “ The principle stated was that whenever it is a defendant’s duty to use reasonable care to keep a bridge, or'other structure or premises, in a proper condition as respects persons passing along the highway, and these are out .of condition and an accident happens, it is incumbent upon him to show that he used that reasonable care and diligence which he was bound to, use; and that the absence of that care may fairly be presumed from the fact that there was the defect from which the accident had arisen.” It is clear that this case does not come within this principle. The defendants here were using’ a derrick to construct a sewer under a contract with the city of Hew York. The plaintiff was not using the street as a highway, but was watching the very work that the defendants were engaged in doing. The derrick in question was not a permanent structure erected upon or adjoining the street, but a structure of a temporary nature, its use requiring that it should be constantly shifted and applied in different positions as the work progressed. And the fact that such an appliance in some unexplained way struck the plaintiff is no evidence that there was any negligence on the part of the defendants in placing the derrick or using it as it was used. The mere fact that John Murray had told the witness to shove the boom around, and to give a hand to help the man that was pulling the tack rope, does not change the relation between the plaintiff and the defendants.
It was at most a mere license to the plaintiff to assist the defendants’ men clearing the track, and it is'not alleged that Murray told
The exclusion by the court of the testimony of the witness dynes upon cross-examination was not error. The witness did not examine the derrick until .the afternoon of the day that the plaintiff was injured, after the derrick had been moved from the position in which it fell, and the question as to what he then found out, of as to whether he then observed the ropes of the derrick, was entirely immaterial.
We think the complaint was properly dismissed. The exceptions should be overruled and judgment directed for the defendants, with Costs.
* Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Rumsey and O’Brien, JJ., concurred:
Exceptions overruled and judgment directed for the defendants, with costs.