94 N.Y.S. 1090 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The plaintiff’s intestate, a young man about nineteen years of age, was caught in a pulley wheel in the wheel room of the defendant’s mill on the morning of February 10, 1903, and instantly killed. He had been in the employ of the defendant about eight or nine months as assistant engineer. The pulley wheel was in one end of the wheel room, and was seven feet three inches in diameter, and
It was the duty of the deceased to place oil or grease in these grease' cups above the bearing above described at certain times during the day, and shortly after eight o’clock on the morning of the accident he was seen with a pail in his hand getting grease out of the grease barrel which stood on the floor of the room a few feet from the northerly end of the brick platform. That was the last time he was ever seen alive. About five minutes thereafter the upper part of his body was found on its back on the platform north of the shafting, and between the shafting and the grease barrel, with the head towards the shafting and about a foot from the small pulley wheel. The legs were found in the bottom of the pit underneath the large pulley wheel and portions of his body were found on the inside of the rim of this large wheel. The grease pail was standing- on the platform on the other side of the shafting from the body and nearer the small pulley wheel above mentioned than the one by which he evidently met his death. The guard rail which had been in front of and,protecting the large wheel was found on the floor of the room torn forcibly from its fastenings.
The above is practically all the' proof there was of the accident, except certain side lights, to wit, that he was young, active, had shortly before been married, had no domestic troubles, was of a happy disposition, and on behalf of the defendant that on a previous Occasion, while in the engine room, the engineer had told him to be very careful or he would get hurt at a time when he was standing in close proximity to some of the machinery there in the engine room. There was no evidence as to whether or not he had filled the grease cups with grease before he was killed.
It maybe said that there was sufficient evidence of the defendant’s negligence, and also that the question of the assumption of the risk by the intestate was properly submitted to the jury.
We think, however, there, was a total absence of tangible facts from which the jury might determine how the accident occurred. It is as reasonable to infer that decedent carelessly approached too
Any conclusion reached depended wholly upon speculation and conjecture. Undoubtedly where there is no eye-witness of the accident and death results, slight evidence will exonerate the decedent from the charge of want of care, yet there must be some proof, some .facts, justifying the inference that contributory negligence may not be imputed to him. (Scheir v. Quirin, 77 App. Div. 624, 628; affd., 177 N. Y. 568; Goodhines v. Chase, 100 App. Div. 87; Palcheski v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co., 69 id. 440.)
It is proper to note that this machinery had been in practically the same condition with the same guard rail for eleven years, with employees passing and repassing daily over this platform to and from the engine room, and no accident had ever occurred. It is also to be noted that the duty of the deceased did not call him in close proximity to this wheel. He was only required to place grease in these cups which were over this bearing, and that could easily be done if he stood in the center of, the platform and some distance from the revolving wheel.
The complaint sets out a cause of action within the Employers’ Liability Act (Laws of 1902, chap. 600). Section 3 of that act provides : “ The question whether the employee understood and assumed the risk of such injury, or was guilty of contributory negligence by his continuance in the same place and course of employment with knowledge of the risk of injury shall be one of fact, subject to the usual powers of the court in a proper case to set aside a verdict rendered contrary to the evidence.”
The effect of this provision is not to relieve the plaintiff from showing freedom from contributory negligence, nor does it require the submission to the jury of this question where there is an. utter absence of proof tending to establish the exercise of care by the person injured. Submission to a jury implies controverted facts or circumstances from which contrary inferences may fairly be drawn. The isolated fact that an employee was killed in the course of his employment does not of itself permit a jury to find that the employee was free from fault contributing to his death. The plaintiff must show affirmatively his freedom from negligence, and
The judgment and order should- be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
All concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event, upon questions of law only, the facts having been examined and no error found therein.