Daley v. . Brown

60 N.E. 752, 167 N.Y. 381, 5 Bedell 381, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1081
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 4, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 60 N.E. 752 (Daley v. . Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daley v. . Brown, 60 N.E. 752, 167 N.Y. 381, 5 Bedell 381, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1081 (N.Y. 1901).

Opinion

Vann, J.

This action was brought- to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff through the shifting of an engine of the defendants used to operate a derrick. The weight of the steel boom, 72 feet long, with two steel cables and a bucket attached, tended to pull the engine toward the derrick, but this was ordinarily prevented by braces which kept the engine in position. On the day of the accident one of the braces became displaced, the engine shifted a few inches to one side, and an attempt was made to restore it to its *384 proper position without lowering the boom. The suggestion of the engineer that the boom should be lowered was disregarded by the foreman. By direction of the foreman; who was. authorized, as the jury found, to superintend and direct the work of replacing the engine, the other brace was removed when, owing to the absence of the braces and the strain caused by the weight of the boom, which stood at an angle of 45 degrees, the engine suddenly slipped on the frozen ground, caught the left leg of the plaintiff between the framework of the engine and one of the sills of the derrick and injured it so as to require amputation above the knee. The plaintiff was a common laborer, engaged in digging earth to fill the bucket. He was first employed the day before the accident, and by direction of the foreman had left his usual work and was standing between the engine and the derrick, where he was prying the engine back into place according to express orders.

A special verdict was found by the jury, who answered eighteen questions submitted to them by the court. They found, in substance, that the nature of the work required the defendants to make-a rule that the boom should be lowered before the engine was moved or shifted, and that due care required them to communicate the rule to the foreman, who ' was authorized to superintend and direct the work of shifting; that they made such a rule and communicated it to the engineer, who had no authority to superintend the work of shifting, and who was not negligent in failing to give the required directions; that the foreman was negligent in superintending and directing or in failing to superintend and direct the manner of doing the work of shifting the engine, and that the danger from which the injury resulted was n.ot open, obvious or known to the plaintiff, who was free from contributory negligence.

Other questions were answered, but they are not now material. There was neither finding nor evidence that the rule was not communicated to the foreman.

The difference of opinion that has arisen in this case clusters mainly around the following questions:

*385 (1) Was it so assumed and treated on the trial by the court and the counsel on either side that the rule had not heen communicated to the foreman as to preclude the appellant from raising the point for the first time upon appeal ?

(2) Was the foreman in general charge of the entire work so that the rule should have been communicated to him ?

The defendants were sworn and each testified that he instructed the engineer to lower the boom before moving or shifting the engine, but no one testified that any such instruction was given to the foreman, who, although in court, was not called as a witness. Tire natural inference was that the rule had been communicated to no one but the engineer. At the close of the evidence for the plaintiff the defendants did not mention the point in their motion for a nonsuit. At the close of all the evidence they asked for the direction of a verdict in their favor without mentioning the point, but on the other hand, expressly stating that it now appears affirmatively in the case that, if a rule was necessary, the defendants made the rule, communicated it to the proper person and he acted upon it.” A colloquy was then had between the court and the counsel upon either side in relation to the questions of fact to be submitted to the jury. The plaintiff contended that certain questions should be submitted, and, among others, whether rules were necessary. Bules; I do not mean instructions to engineers, but rules governing all employees, Finnegan, the foreman, included.” The defendants insisted that there was no question of fact in the case and when the court suggested a special verdict they objected, because there was no question of fact to be passed upon. Their counsel said to the court: “ If you think within your own judgment there are things that are disputed, that you desire settled by the jury, it should be done. Of course Mr. Becker (defendants’ counsel) and myself do not think there is anything here that needs settling. * * * I know by experience that your Honor is quite expert in framing propositions of law and fact. I shall not quarrel with the form of *386 them that you and my friend get up, but I do quarrel with the proposition that there is anything to go that way, and I desire to be placed on record as objecting to the submission of any questions of fact to the jury, in any form, and take my exception to the ruling which permits it.” After the questions had been substantially prepared, the court asked one of the defendants’ counsel if he had any special objection to any of them, and after some conversation back and forth the defendants’ counsel asked “ should not there be an additional question framed which the jury might answer * * * were the dangers known and obvious to the plaintiff ? ” Another question was thereupon framed accordingly. The defendants’ counsel criticized the form of still another question, stating that it might confuse the jury, whereupon the court suggested a change arid asked, would that help any ? ” The defendants’ counsel replied, “ yes, I think that would help it under the conditions and circumstances surrounding the work.” Further conversation occurred during which the court suggested another question still, to which the defendants’ counsel replied, “that is right.” Finally the defendants’ counsel said: “We except to the submission of each; object to the submission of each of the questions of fact in the form in which they are submitted.” The court: “ Well, you do not object to the form of the questions, do you ? I asked you to make any suggestions to change the form of the questions.” Mr. Shire : “ Oh, the form is all right.” The court: “ If you have any objections to the form of the questions, I should think they ought to be raised now.” Mr. Tracy 0. Becker : “Well, you may put it this way then: That we object to the submission of each of the questions and except to the submission of each.”

The court charged the jury impartially and no exception was taken by either side. In submitting the 8th question, relating to the duty of the defendants to communicate the rule to the foreman, the court said: “ It is claimed on the part of the defendants that the rule was to govern -the' engineer; that the foreman had nothing to do with the operation of the *387

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 N.E. 752, 167 N.Y. 381, 5 Bedell 381, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1081, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daley-v-brown-ny-1901.