46 N.Y.S. 184 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
This was an action to recover damages from the defendants for, their alleged!.' negligence, by reason of which the plaintiffs’ intestate 'received iñjjuries which caused his death. The' defendants, as it appears, were contractors, engaged in- erecting an addition to a large building in the city of Hew York. Robertson was a bricklayer in their employ. To -do his.woik it"was necessai-y that he should go upon one of the upper floors of the building. For that purpose he, with five other men, got upon an elevator which was in the building. As the elevator going up. had reached the fourth floor of the building it was obstructed by some planks that lay across the elevator
Upon the trial a very great number of exceptions were taken by the defendants’ counsel, all of which we do not deem it necessary separately to consider. It will be sufficient in the decision of this case to lay down certain established rules which apply to cases arising upon similar facts. The theory of the plaintiffs’ case was that the defendants had furnished this elevator for the purpose of enabling the men in their employ who were at work upon the building to go to the upper floors to begin their work, and that, as a part of their duty, they were bound to use reasonable care to see that this means of access to their work which the defendants had furnished was in a proper condition and reasonably safe for the purposes for which it was intended. The plaintiffs further insisted that the' permitting of the planks to be across the elevator hole on the fourth floor was a negligent act, for which the defendants were responsible.
To enable the plaintiffs to maintain this theory, it was necessary that they should prove, in the first place, that this elevator was furnished by the defendants for the purpose of carrying the men to their place of work, or, at least, that the men were permitted to ride upon it with the knowledge and consent of the defendants, or óf some person who stood in their place in the building, so that the defendants were responsible for his acts. This was sought to be proved by testimony to the effect that one Walters, who was said to be the foreman of the bricklayers, being at the bottom of the elevator when the deceased and his companions were there, told them to get on the elevator and go up to the upper floors. No other testimony was given from which it could be claimed that the defendants authorized the plaintiffs’ intestate, or any other man, to •ride upon this elevator. It appeared that Walters was the foreman of the bricklayers. There was no testimony other than that to show
Even if the defendants had furnished this elevator for the purposes of transportation of their workmen, they were not insurers of its safety. The only duty which they had in that regard was to use reasonable care that the elevator should be in proper condition and safe for the transportation of the workmen. If the elevator was a proper machine, and became unsafe only upon being negligently or' ■carelessly used, or because some obstruction had been put in its way, the defendants were not liable for any such negligence or carelessness, in the absence of proof that such unsafe condition had been caused by their own careless act, or that it had continued so long that they should have known of it and had an opportunity to remedy it. (Stringham v. Hilton, 111 N. Y. 188; Painton v.
We do not examine the questions raised by the numerous other exceptions. It is quite possible that many of' them will not arise upon a new trial. It is sufficient to say that for the erroneous rulings indicated in this opinion, the judgment and the order denying the motion for a new trial must be reversed and a new trial ordered, With costs to the appellants to abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J., Williams, Ingraham arid Parker, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellants to abide event.