Collins v. William W. Spencer & Sons Corp.

215 A.D. 243, 213 N.Y.S. 437, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10944
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 22, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 215 A.D. 243 (Collins v. William W. Spencer & Sons Corp.) 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
Collins v. William W. Spencer & Sons Corp., 215 A.D. 243, 213 N.Y.S. 437, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10944 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Rich, J.

The defendant, the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company, is moving for a reargument in this court, upon the ground that the court overlooked or misapprehended the points made by the appellant on the hearing of this appeal, and because this court has been misled as to the facts and issues, or in the alternative, that we certify that questions of law are involved which ought to be reviewed by the Court of Appeals. The fear is entertained by the learned counsel for the moving party that, as no opinion was written in this court, it did not properly understand the facts and the points made.

The appeal papers were not overlooked; on the contrary, they received the same careful attention that is given to all matters presented for consideration. While it is true that no opinion was written, the justice to whom the case was assigned made a written report, which was before each member of the court taking part in the decision before it came up for consideration at the consultation table, and upon consultation we were of the unanimous opinion that the judgment should be affirmed. For the information of the bar it may not be unwise to say that in every case presented to this court a report is written and preserved in its files. It is only in those rare instances where we deem the publication of an opinion to be of importance that they are permitted to go down. But we think, in this case, in view of the fact that the verdict was a large one, that counsel are entitled to know something of the attention that the appeal received even before it reached the consultation table. The report that was written follows:

“The plaintiff Collins, on January 13, 1924, was in the employ of the Spencer Corporation. The Spencer Corporation is in the stevedoring business, and at the time mentioned it was engaged in loading a cargo of steel beams aboard lighter No. 124 belonging to defendant Lehigh Valley Railroad Company. This lighter No. 124 lay alongside a steam hoist, No. 406, which was moored to the dock at the Claremont Terminal, Jersey City, New Jersey. This steam hoist was also the property of the railroad company. The starboard or right-hand side of the steam hoist lay against the dock, [245]*245which the cargo was being loaded from the dock, lay against the port side of steam hoist No. 406. The stern of lighter 124 was about fifteen feet ahead of the stern of hoist 406. The hoist was equipped with a mast and with a boom seventy-five feet long to which was attached a fall which was operated by a stationary engine located aft in the deckhouse of the hoist. The engine on the hoist and the fall were operated by the engineer of the hoist, one Caulfield. Guys attached to the boom, and used for the purpose of swinging the boom, were operated by Johansen, the captain of the hoist. The engineer and the captain were both in the employ of the defendant railroad company.

“The method of loading the steel beams was as follows: The beams were on railroad cars on the dock. The boom of the hoist would be swung over the dock and the fall lowered. A wire cable or sling twenty feet long would then be looped around each end of a draft of three or four beams and fastened by means of an eye to a hook suspended from the fall, so that the fall pennants holding the hooks and the slings took the shape of an inverted £ Y/ with the fall forming the stem and the pennants and slings forming the arms of the £ Y ’ when the draft was suspended in the air. After the slings were looped around the draft of three or four beams, the beams would be lifted by raising the fall until it cleared the height of the side of the car, and the boom would then be swung over by means of the guy ropes across the steam hoist and over lighter No. 124 until the draft reached a point above where it was to be landed, when, on the signal of the men on barge 124, the fall would be lowered until the beams came to rest on wooden skids or scant-lings which had been put in position by the longshoremen on lighter 124. The workmen other than the engineer and the captain of the hoist were employes of the Spencer Corporation.

££ In the process of the work, after the draft had landed on the skid or scantling, one of the eyes of each sling would then be taken off the hook, the fall raised and the boom swung back over to the railroad car. The sling would thus be pulled out from under the draft which had been landed on barge 124, and the fact that the beams rested on the wooden skids permitted the sling to slip out from under the beams without deranging them. The beams were fifteen or twenty feet in length, ten or fourteen inches in width, and weighed two thousand or twenty-two hundred pounds. The work of loading the barge had gone on for some days prior to the accident on January thirteenth. The plaintiff on the twelfth had been working on the covered pier running a hand car and trucking freight. At the request of Reed, the foreman for the Spencer Corporation, the plaintiff reported for work Sunday morning, [246]*246January thirteenth, and was engaged until noon in loading pig iron from cars on the dock. After lunch he was sent to work on barge 124 to take the place of a man who had not come back to work. The accident to the plaintiff happened when the very first draft came over from the cars on the dock. During Sunday morning sufficient steel beams had been landed on the lighter to cover clear across the deck. In addition to this first layer or tier there was, on both the port and starboard sides, three or four drafts piled up one on top of the other. A colaborer of the plaintiff, known as Mike or Rosy ’ Pazi, was working with the plaintiff and it was the duty of each of them to place the skids, land the draft and unhook the slings. As the plaintiff and Rosy stood upon these two tiers which were distant from each other about six feet, each of them stood on one end of the draft. The stowed beams above referred to came up to about their shoulders. The draft at the time of the accident was being lowered and being placed into this well down between the two tiers. As the draft came down, plaintiff was on its stern end and Rosy on the bow end. The engineer and captain of hoist No. 406 were on the stern end, on deck, one on each side of the winch and considerably back of the plaintiff, at least twenty feet. The draft was lowered and had come to rest on the sldds (fol. 129). The plaintiff had to lean out from behind the beams piled up on the starboard side of the lighter, in order to signal with his left hand to the captain and the engineer of the hoist while guiding the draft out with his right hand. The plaintiff transmitted the signal to the engineer and captain by waving his hand to lower, and as the draft landed he continued to signal for more slack.

The plaintiff testified that when he came on the lighter after lunch he found a skid or scantling in place at his end ready to receive the next draft. Rosy testified that the plaintiff himself picked out the scantling from the pile and put it in place. This difference in testimony is, however, unimportant, as the plaintiff admits that he picked up the scantling, examined it, and concluding that it was adequate for the purpose, replaced it. The draft of three beams in question was hoisted out of a gondola car, cleared the car and was swung across hoist No. 406 until it came over barge No. 124. It came down slowly, the plaintiff motioning by hand with a downward motion (fols. 128, 129, 135) to the engineer, indicating that the draft was to be lowered; and after it rested on the skids the plaintiff gave the engineer a signal for slack. The plaintiff could not reach the hook on each end and had to step in toward the center of the beams to reach it (fol. 136).

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215 A.D. 243, 213 N.Y.S. 437, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-william-w-spencer-sons-corp-nyappdiv-1926.