Darling v. Oswego Falls Manufacturing Co.

37 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 276
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 37 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 276 (Darling v. Oswego Falls Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darling v. Oswego Falls Manufacturing Co., 37 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 276 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1883).

Opinion

Barker, J. :

The defendant is a trading corporation, manufacturing wool into cloth, by the use of machinery, propelled by steam-power, located at Oswego Falls, its home office being in the city of New York.

During the morning of the only day the plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant, he' received, as he alleges, an injury to one of his legs, below the kne'e; that the same occurred in consequence of the negligence of the defendant, its officers and agents in directing him to labor in an exposed and dangerous place, of which he was wholly ignorant. The buildings occupied by the defendant were partially destroyed by fire a few days previous to the accident, the end brick wall of one of the buildings was injured and partly fell, leaving portions of the brick cornice some thirty feet above the ground with some of the brick therein loose and liable to fall on a slight jar of the wall. The defendant engaged Mr. Ware to put the building in a safe and secure condition, which the defendant claims was done; all the loose brick liable to be displaced were removed before the plaintiff was engaged to labor for it. The morning of the accident the superintendent, with some laborers including the plaintiff, were at the factory engaged in repairing and restoring the buildings. At this time the machinery was running in some one of the buildings. The defendant’s evidence tended to show that the wall was jarred by the action of the machinery. Near the wall described and within three or four feet of it, the superintendent, the plaintiff and others, were engaged in lifting and moving a piece of timber, several feet in length, the same being wholly separate and detached from any of the buildings. While the plaintiff was thus engaged a brick fell from the cornice [278]*278and injured the plaintiff, as the proof tends to show. The party of men moved the timber some eight or ten feet, and laid it down, and the plaintiff immediately complained of the injury. He then and there and within two minutes had a conversation with Mr. Ware the superintendent, concerning the injury. There is no claim that the moving of the timber disturbed the wall or in any way caused the brick to fall.

In its answer, the defendant denied that the plaintiff was injured that morning, or that any brick fell as claimed by him, and on the trial contested the plaintiff’s right to recover for these reasons, and the proof tended to support this position. On the trial, and as a part of his proof-in-ehief, the plaintiff offered to prove by his own evidence the statements made by Ware at the time and place already mentioned, with a view of showing that at the time the plaintiff came on the work and at the time of the injury the wall was in an unsafe and insecure condition, and that the superintendent knew the fact. The defendant objected to the evidence upon the ground that it was incompetent, immaterial and irrelevant, and that it did not appear that Mr. Ware, the superintendent, was authorized to represent or speak for the defendant, and that his declarations or admissions made at that time were not evidence against the defendant. The objection was overruled, and the defendant excepted.

The plaintiff then gave the following evidence: ££ Mr. Ware said that£ he knew where the brick came from.’ He said: £ It came from up thei-e,’ pointing to the cornice; there' was some brick that lay corner-wise and off the cornice ; he said : ‘ I saw they were loose, yesterday, and I meant to have them thrown down ; I miss one of them; he called to Mr. Mosher and said: £ Let us go up and throw off those brick; ’ they started from where I was and went into the building out of my sight; he pointed to loose brick in the cornice on the building that had burned.”

Was this evidence competent? In my judgment it was not. It is a mere statement as to the condition of the wall on a prior day, and as to the superintendent’s intentions to remove the same. The 'declaration was not made in relation to any act then being done by Mr. Ware or the plaintiff, but it related to a collateral circumstance which happened at another time. It is mere hearsay-evidence, and its reception was in violation of a fundamental rule [279]*279of evidence. The acts and movements of Ware and the plaintiff that morning did not directly nor remotely cause the brick to fall. The circumstance of its falling would have been the same if they had been a mile away and otherwise engaged. When the statemént was made by Ware the accident had occurred, and all the circumstances connected with itwereovér; the men under Ware had come to a standstill; the plaintiff had related the nature of the injury he had received ; no one was certain as to the cause of it, and an inquiry was begun between the plaintiff and his co-servants ás to the cause of the injury. Ware, as the agent and servant of the defendant, had no authority to make an admission concerning the injury. The statement of facts which Ware made to the plaintiff did not relate in the least degree to any of the acts performed by himself for the defendant, after the plaintiff had entered the service of the defendant. On the contrary, the admissions related to the condition of the wall and to the acts and omissions of one of the defendant’s servants, at a time when the plaintiff had no concern in either. The facts and circumstances of this case place it outside the rule which permits the admissions of an agent to be proved against and made binding on his principal.

The true rale, which is well understood and of universal acceptance, is correctly stated in Greenleaf on Evidence, with its limitations and qualifications, and is as follows: “ The principal constitutes the agent his representative, in the transaction of certain business ; whatever therefore the agent does in the lawful prosecution of that business is the act of the principal whom he represents. And where the acts of the agent will bind the principal, there his representations, declarations and admissions, respecting the subject-matter will also bind him, if made at the same time and constituting part of the res gestw. * * * But the admission or declaration of his agent binds him only when it is made during the continuance of the agency in regard to a transaction then depending.” * * * When thus limited the declarations are of the nature of original evidence and not of hearsay; the representation or statement of the agent in such cases being the ultimate fact to be proved and not an admission of some other fact.” (See vól. 1, §§ 113; Story on Agency, §§ 13d, 137; 1 Taylor on Evidence, §§ 526, 541.)

There is difficulty at times in applying the principle laid down. [280]*280by these authors. Numerous cases have been adjudicated wherein it is decided that the declarations and admissions of an agent are not receivable in evidence against his principal. The following decisions illustrate the rule, the facts and circumstances being similar to those in this case.

In Luby v. The Hudson River Railroad Company (17 N. Y., 131), the defendant was charged with negligence in running one of its cars drawn by horses, against the plaintiff and causing injuries. The driver was at once arrested by a policeman, and on being so arrested assigned as a reason why he did not stop the car, that the brakes were out of order. On the trial the plaintiff was permitted to prove the admissions of the driver as made to the policeman, and this was held to be error, the court in its opinion laying down the rule as follows: “ The declarations of an agent or servant will not in general bind the principal.

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Insurance Co. v. Mosley
75 U.S. 397 (Supreme Court, 1869)
Packet Co. v. Clough
87 U.S. 528 (Supreme Court, 1874)
White v. . Miller
71 N.Y. 118 (New York Court of Appeals, 1877)
Luby v. . the Hudson River Railroad Company
17 N.Y. 131 (New York Court of Appeals, 1858)
Hanover Railroad v. Coyle
55 Pa. 396 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1867)
Fawcett v. Bigley
59 Pa. 411 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1868)
Kincaid v. Dormey
47 Mo. 337 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1871)

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darling-v-oswego-falls-manufacturing-co-nysupct-1883.