Collelli v. Turner

154 A.D. 218, 138 N.Y.S. 900, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9909
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 13, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 154 A.D. 218 (Collelli v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collelli v. Turner, 154 A.D. 218, 138 N.Y.S. 900, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9909 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

This action was brought to recover damages for the loss by the plaintiff of his left hand, while in the employ of the defendants, and engaged in operating or assisting in operating a machine used by them in embossing or stamping skins or leather. The accident happened on June 6,19 OY.

This machine consists in part, it appears, of two horizontal steel or metal plates, one over the other, some three feet square, or nearly so, and so adjusted that their faces or flat surfaces may he brought together and separated by machinery raising and lowering the under plate. The dies or stamps are in the upper or stationary plate.

The process of stamping, conducted by two persons, is to spread the skin to be stamped on the lower plate and then press a treadle with the foot, whereby a fly wheel is put in motion and the lower plate raised until it presses the skin against the stamps or dies in the upper plate, after which it falls back in position, so that the stamped skin may be removed, another put in its place, and the operation repeated.

In the course of one of these operations, and when the plaintiff was so removing a stamped skin, “ all at once,” as he says, “ the machine [lower plate or bed] came up and took off my hand. The machine [plate or bed] was down at the time I was pulling off the skin. It caught the left hand; this hand was inside and the right hand was outside. It caught my left hand.”

It appears by the testimony of the plaintiff and two other witnesses that this lower plate or bed of the machine would occasionally rise without pressure on the treadle; a defect which a witness who had previously worked on the machine had called to the attention of a person whom he styled my boss, a few days before the accident. In fact, this witness refused to work on the machine any longer, and left the employ of the defendants only a few days before the accident, because his boss, having promised to fix the machine, failed to do so.

Plaintiff began using the machine on the day previous to that of his injury, but with knowledge of this defect. He testified, in part: “ I saw that I had to put my hands in between these two parts of the press to do the work. The moment I [220]*220started to do this work I saw that the lower part of the press •vyas likely to jump up at any time, without anybody causing it to jump up, and I started into work on the press under those conditions and worked all that first day under those conditions. I came back to work again on it the next morning under those conditions. I say I noticed it coming up again the next day without anybody applying-any pressure to the treadle. * * * I continued to work on it the next -day under those conditions until I was hurt.” ' He had already testified that he saw the bed rise once without pressure on the treadle before he began working on the machine, but said nothing about it.

The court .dismissed the complaint at the close of the testimony for the plaintiff.

It is very clear that a verdict for the plaintiff upon this testimony could not stand, and that the complaint was, therefore, properly dismissed.

It is well' settled in this State, and has been for more than half a century, says Baylies in his Trial Practice (2d ed. p. 308), that on a failure of proof on the part of the plaintiff, he may be nonsuited against his consent. It is also settled law that when a person accepts employment he assumes all the ordinary and usual risks and perils incident thereto, whether the employment he dangerous or otherwise, and also all risks which he knows, or may, in the exercise of reasonable care, know, to exist, unless there is an agreement to the contrary. (Shaw v. Sheldon, 103 N. Y. 667; Davidson v. Cornell, 132 id. 228; Maltbie v. Belden, 167 id. 307.)

This case comes within the scope of the foregoing and many other decisions of the courts of this State; particularly that part of the rule to the effect that an employee assumes the risk of injury from all obvious dangers, and so, if he voluntarily enters into, or continues in the service, having knowledge or the means of knowing the dangers involved, he is deemed to assume the risk and to waive any claim for damages against his employer in case of personal injuries. Following are a. few of the many decisions in which the rule has been applied.

In Meigel v. Crandall Oil & Putty Mfg. Co. (141 App. Div. 828) the plaintiff, in the employ of the defendant, lost three of his fingers while taking putty from the pan of a [221]*221putty-mixing machine. The negligence alleged was a defect in a ratchet by reason of which a lever slipped from its place, reversing the operation of machinery, and causing the accident. The plaintiff had known of this defect for several weeks prior to his injury. The case was twice tried, resulting each time in a verdict for him. Yet this court held that the plaintiff, having accepted employment upon this machine with knowledge of its defects, voluntarily assumed the risks incident thereto, and reversed the judgment upon the second verdict in his favor.

In Reinertsen v. Erie Railroad Co. (142 App. Div. 31) the plaintiff, in the employ of the defendant, nailing planks between the tracks in its terminal yards, was hit, while kneeling at his work, by a passing engine, and seriously in jured. The negligence charged was the negligence of the defendant in omitting to furnish a safe place to work by enforcing a rule providing for a signalman to give plaintiff and associate workmen notice of approaching cars. The plaintiff’s testimony was to the effect that no such signalman had been provided or acted during his service from April second to May eighth, the time of the accident. “I had to rely on my own watchfulness,” he testified) “ and not on any one who was there to tell me or warn me when those engines were coming.” The court held that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover upon the evidence, and reversed a judgment in his favor. “He knew,” said the court, “ that the place was dangerous; ” and “ that he was not guarded by watchmen. * * * His master, to his own knowledge, had left its obligation unfulfilled and cast upon him the duty of self-preservation, and he was injured by reason of his failure to perform this duty which had fallen to him and which he had assumed.”

In James v. Cranford (123 App. Div. 558) the plaintiff, employed by the defendant in painting a railroad structure, was injured by a shock as the result of contact between a metal swab which he was using and an electrically charged third rail of the structure. He testified that he knew this rail was in use and “a very dangerous thing” to come in contact with; that he knew the danger of it from the time he began to work, and that he was likely to get a shock at any time he came in contact with it. The court, having quoted the rules [222]*222as to the assumption of risk, held that the plaintiff, having knowledge of the danger of coming in contact with the third rail, assumed the risk of injury therefrom, and reversed a judgment in his favor,

In Powers v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co. (98 N. Y. 274) plaintiffs’ intestate was killed by being thrown from a handcar on its road.

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Bluebook (online)
154 A.D. 218, 138 N.Y.S. 900, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collelli-v-turner-nyappdiv-1912.