Eichholz v. Niagara Falls Hydraulic Power & Manufacturing Co.

68 A.D. 441, 73 N.Y.S. 842
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 68 A.D. 441 (Eichholz v. Niagara Falls Hydraulic Power & Manufacturing 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
Eichholz v. Niagara Falls Hydraulic Power & Manufacturing Co., 68 A.D. 441, 73 N.Y.S. 842 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinions

McLennan, J.:

Although the record in this case is voluminous the material facts are few, and are not in serious conflict. The defendant was the owner of a system of canals in the city of Niagara Falls, N. Y., constructed for the purpose of developing water power. At the time in question it was engaged in building a conduit from the end of its main canal and at right angles to it, to convey Water into a [443]*443forebay or storage reservoir. An excavation about eighteen feet ■deep and forty feet wide through clay éarth of different varieties had been made, in which to construct the conduit. The defendant was also doing construction work on its main canal some little distance from where the excavation was made, which consisted of building a retaining wall at right angles to it. The construction of the retaining wall had nothing to do with the construction of the conduit, and was for an entirely different purpose, to wit, to support a bank upon which a railroad track had been constructed. The entire work under construction by the defendant had been planned by its engineer, one Wallace Johnson. It also had a superintendent, one Ross Coddingtdn, who had general charge of the entire work, and who was charged with the duty of seeing to it that it was •executed in accordance with the plans of the engineer. The defendant also had a foreman, who was under the immediate supervision •of Coddington, by the name of O’Leary, and he had charge of the laborers who did the excavating. The defendant also had a foreman of masons, Charles Reisig, who had charge of the stone masons, but who had nothing to do with the excavation or with the men employed upon that work. The conduit was to be built of masonry at the bottom of the excavation, by masons under the direction of the mason foreman, Charles Reisig. The plaintiffs’ witnesses testified that the bank of the excavation was left substantially perpendicular. The witnesses called by the defendant state that it sloped back six inches to each foot.

Plaintiffs’ testator, who was a stone mason, was first employed by the defendant on the 19th day of July, 1898, and commenced work ■on the south end of the retaining wall, nearly fifty feet from the excavation. He continued to work on the wall until the afternoon ■of July 25, 1898, when he was directed to go into the trench and work on the conduit. Until then he had never worked upon the ■conduit or in its immediate vicinity; he. did not know and had no means of knowing about the bank of the excavation, its situation or •condition. From where he had been at work on the retaining wall .he could have seen the excavation, but during that time there had been no caving in or falling of the bank, or anything to attract his .attention to it.

On July 25, 1898, Reisig, the foreman of the masons, was given [444]*444orders by Coddington, the general superintendent, to commence work on the conduit. A short time before Eeisig discovered that the bank was cracked on the top, three or four feet back from its. edge,, and he so reported to the general superintendent, Codding-ton, and informed him that the bank w;as unsafe, and Eeisig refused to put his men in the trench. Coddington, according to the evidence, gave Eeisig a peremptory command so to do, but. Eeisig refused-to obey, and Coddington then himself ordered the masons, plaintiffs’ intestate among them, to go into the excavation and work upon the conduit. Plaintiffs’ testator with the other masons, pursuant to Coddington’s most emphatic command, entered into the trench and commenced laying stone. He had worked but a short time when a large quantity of earth came from the- top of the bank, where it had been cracked, down upon him,, and he sustained the injuries for which recovery is sought in this action. Plaintiffs’ testator was very seriously injured, and prior to the accident he had always been well, robust and strong.

The facts above recited are substantially as claimed by the plaint-tiffs, and while the proof as to some of them is conflicting, there is evidence from which the jury would have been justified in finding -the facts to be as above recited. Hpon those facts, it would seem 'clear, the jury was justified in finding that the defendant did not provide a safe place for plaintiffs’ testator to work in, and that for its failure, so to do it was liablé. Coddington had general supervision of the work, and was the alter ego of the defendant. He had been informed that the bank which fell upon the- deceased was unsafe. His attention had been especially directed tó the fact that a large crack existed in the top of the bank, which’ rendered it liable to fall at any moment, yet, notwithstanding such information, lie peremptorily’- ordered plaintiffs’ testator and his associates, to commence work in the place which he knew or ought to have known was dangerous, and which proved to be so in- fact.

The cases cited by appellant’s counsel (Del Sejnore v. Hallinan, 153 N. Y. 274; Rhodes v. Lauer, 32 App. Div. 206; O’Connell v. Clark, 22 id. 466) are in no way authority for the proposition that under .the facts disclosed by the evidence in this case defend- - ant’s negligence was not established. The case of Del Sejnore v. Hollinan (supra) is clearly distinguishable by-the fact that “the [445]*445■defendants had furnished planks and braces with which to shore up the trench, and had instructed their employees to keep a watch for ■any cracks or evidence of a giving away of the earth, and upon the •discovery of any tendency in that direction to immediately shore up the walls of the trench. It further appeared that a careful watch had been kept, but that nothing had been observed tending to indicate the approaching calamity.”

. So in Rhodes v. Lauer (supra), which was a case where stone, which was being unloaded by one of defendants’ teamsters, fell from a bank into a trench where plaintiff’s intestate was working, •and' injured him in such manner as to cause his death, the load of ¡stone had been placed so near the edge of the bank by the person who was unloading it that the bank gave way and the stone fell to the trench below. The court said: “ There was evidence to the -effect that the foreman of the defendants told the teamster to unload the stone as near to the edge of the bank as he could without having them roll over into the canal. We do .not think negligence or willfulness can be imputed to the defendants because of such a direction. From the nature of the work any intelligent teamster should infer ¡as much without direction. It does not appear that there had been any indications that the edge of the bank was soft or yielding!

In that case there was nothing to indicate to defendant’s foreman that any danger was to be apprehended, while in the case at bar, as we .have seen, defendant’s general superintendent was informed in the most positive way that the bank was- cracked and was in danger •of falling at any time upon any one who should be at work in the trench below.

In O' Connell v. Clark (supra) the court said: “The risk was: obvious, and as palpable to the plaintiff as it was to the defendant.” This remark is sufficient to entirely distinguish that case from the one at bar.

These cases in no manner conflict wffh the rule laid down in Kranz v. L. I. R. Co. (123 N. Y. 4), which was also a case where the deceased was working in a trench. The head note is as follows: ■“ The question of defendant’s negligence should have been submitted to the jury; that defendant owed to W.

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68 A.D. 441, 73 N.Y.S. 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eichholz-v-niagara-falls-hydraulic-power-manufacturing-co-nyappdiv-1902.