Craig v. Laflin & Rand Powder Co.

55 A.D. 49, 67 N.Y.S. 74
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 55 A.D. 49 (Craig v. Laflin & Rand Powder Co.) 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
Craig v. Laflin & Rand Powder Co., 55 A.D. 49, 67 N.Y.S. 74 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Hirschberg, J.:

The plaintiff’s decedent, her husband, was killed by an explosion on the 3d of July, 1898, which wrecked the smokeless powder plant of the defendant located at Pompton in the State of New Jersey. He was the engineer of the plant and had been employed in that capacity since the previous May. He was informed at the time of his employment of the dangerous nature of the occupation, and in the month of J une stated to the superintendent that he had been thinking of leaving, because he thought the work dangerous, but had concluded to stay in eonsequencé of an increase in his pay. His duties involved the general supervision of all the power machinery, engine, dynamos,, boiler, motors, etc.

The explosion occurred in the course of manufacture, and undoubt- . edly originated in one of the mixing houses where the initial and most dangerous step in the process was in progress, viz., that of mixing certain highly explosive materials and chemicals in iron vessels or “ mixers.” The operatives, in accordance with a practice which had prevailed for some, years without an accident, after placing the necessary materials in the mixers, left the mixing house and retired behind a wall where a button was pressed which served electricity to start the machinery. This wall was twelve feet high, one hundred and eighty feet long, four feet thick at its base and three feet at the top: It shielded the mixing house and an assembly room

adjoining it, and at the time of the accident men were engaged in digging a trench with a view of its extension. During the time the men were stationed behind the wall it was customary to expose danger signals, and that was done on the occasion in question.

The witnesses agree that an explosion is chiefly if not solely to be apprehended during the first ten minutes of the mixing process. If none occurs during that period the men return to the mixing house and remain there at work until the commencement of another mix[51]*51ing requires them to again station themselves outside and behind the protecting wall. The mixing process was repeated hourly. On the day in question a moment or two after starting the machinery an explosion occurred, presumably in the mixing house, followed by another probably caused by the first detonation. The interval between the two explosions must have been very brief. A witness for the plaintiff said: The time between the explosions was not much, only time to get on my knees and I was knocked down again. I had not got all the way up.” At the time of the explosions the plaintiff’s intestate was standing under or by a tree about ten feet from and at the northerly end of the wall, opposite the end of the assembly room farthest from the mixing house. No one saw him killed. Part of his jaw was off, and he was partly disembowelled, but by what precise means or violence does not appeal*. About ten feet of the end of the wall opposite where he stood was blown down and the stones blown over, and he may have been struck by the debris, but the fact, if it be a fact, was not proven.

The assembly room was about five feet distant from the mixing house, and they were joined together by a closed passageway, a single roof and inclosed sides. About eighty feet from the assembly room was a well or nitro-glycerine box in the ground or against a bank, and at least one hundred feet farther was a gun cotton dry house. Another gun cotton dry house was at about the same distance from the mixing and assembly houses, but in a different direction. In the assembly house, the well and the gun cotton dry houses were stored at the time quantities of explosive material which it may be fairly assumed were exploded because of the explosion in the mixing house, and because of their propinquity. At all events after the explosions it was found that the mixing house, the assembly house, the nitro-glycerine well and the two gun cotton dry houses had all exploded and other buildings on the property were burned up. The two gun cotton dry houses were used for the storage of the principal stock of explosives, the nitro-glycerine well as an intermediate storage place for a much smaller quantity, and in the assembly house was kept for convenience a still smaller supply to be used in the hourly mixings.

It was conceded that the plaintiff could not recover if the deceased was killed by the first explosion, but the case was tried [52]*52and submitted to the jury upon the theory that there could be a recovery if he was killed by the second explosion. The plaintiff’s claim appears to have been that the second explosion involved the destruction of the nitro-glycerine well, and that it Was the explosion of that well which killed the deceased. The negligence charged in the complaint is “ the defective and improper construction, grouping and equipment of the buildings and outhouses” belonging to the defendant, and the specification upon the trial chiefly related to the storing of explosives so near to the mixing house that an explosion -in that house would be likely to extend to the others. The learned trial justice charged the jury as follows : She claims that the circumstances of the accident, the extent of the injury done, the location of her husband at the time of' the explosion of the well with its contents, and all the surroundings indicated a second explosion, which is claimed to be the well explosion which injured him. That but for such storing of the- nitro-glycerine and gun cotton he* would have escaped injury, even if the mixer had exploded, as he was protected as they claim, by the wall against the mixer explosion. * * * The claim of the defendant is that there is no satisfactory proof of any negligence on the part of the defendant. * * * That there is no satisfactory proof that points to the injury as the result of the well explosion as distinguished from the mixer explosion. I think you understand that if the death was. caused by the mixer explosion alone there can be no recovery, because, if the storage of the explosives too near the mixer had nothing to do with the injury to her husband, the plaintiff has no cause of action; that her .claim is, it was because of the nearness of one set of explosives to another, without any necessity for their being SO’ placed, and that that neglect and carelessness caused the fatal result; that nearness, without aiiy barriers between.”

Assuming that the defendant would be liable to an employee for injuries which could be proven to have been occasioned solely by the second explosion, but of course without deciding it, I find no sufficient proof that the decedent’s death was so occasioned. If he was killed by the falling of . the wall, of which there is no direct proof, there is nothing to indicate that the wall Was thrown down by the second explosion. The case appears to have been tried on the theory that both the mixing and the assembly houses were [53]*53destroyed in the first explosion, in which event the injury to the wall would be a probable result of such explosion, and there is no evidence indicating the contrary. There is no evidence establishing any weakness or defect in the Avail itself, and none, other than the accident, tending to prove that it was not entirely adequate for the purpose for Avhich it was constructed.

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Bluebook (online)
55 A.D. 49, 67 N.Y.S. 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craig-v-laflin-rand-powder-co-nyappdiv-1900.