Fearon v. New York Life Insurance

162 A.D. 560, 147 N.Y.S. 644, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6033
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 162 A.D. 560 (Fearon v. New York Life Insurance) 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
Fearon v. New York Life Insurance, 162 A.D. 560, 147 N.Y.S. 644, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6033 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Ingraham, P. J.:

I concur in the reversal of this judgment on the ground that the evidence did not justify a submission of the case to the jury. I also agree that the errors pointed out by my brother Laughlin are such as to require a reversal.

McLaughlin and Scott, JJ., concurred.

Laughlin, J.:

This is a statutory action to recover for the death of Bernard Fearon which was caused by an ash hoist descending upon him in the basement of defendant’s building at 346 Broadway, borough of Manhattan, New York, while he was in its employ on the night of February 5, 1912. The decedent was forty-six years of age and in the best of health. He had had considerable experience as a coal passer and fireman and was a licensed fireman. He was employed by the defendant as a coal passer and commenced work for it the night before he met with the accident. One Loughlin, a fireman in the employ of the defendant, and who was related to decedent by marriage, knowing that the defendant required the services of a man to take the place of one injured, brought the decedent to the defendant’s building the night before the accident and presented him to the defendant’s first assistant engineer, Anderson, who was then going off duty, saying that “ here was a coal passer,” and the assistant engineer instructed Loughlin in effect to put decedent to work as a coal passer, and, as Loughlin was then going on duty for twelve hours, he, without further directions from the assistant engineer or any one else, assumed to assign work to the decedent as assistant to him as fireman in charge of the boñers. Loughlin testified that the first work decedent did was to wheel coal and that the next work done was removing ashes from the fires, and that, while the decedent was wheeling coal he informed decedent that" he would get the ash cans which were “ on the elevator shaft,” by which he meant in the vault or room under the Leonard street sidewalk in which a hoist elevator leading to the sidewalk had been installed and was operated, and he did, but that [562]*562the decedent would have to get them the next night and that they then together cleaned two fires.

The evidence shows among other things that the fireman was responsible for the condition of the fires and for keeping up steam, and that the duties of the coal passer were to assist the fireman, but that the fireman was not responsible for the coal passer’s work and that they worked together in shoveling coal and feeding the fires and shaking down the furnaces and helped one another; that there was always a watch engineer on duty at night vested with authority to give orders to the firemen, coal passers and other employees if and when necessary, and that the firemen worked eight hours and the coal passers twelve hours ordinarily, but they received the same per diem wages.

The decedent came to work on the night of the accident at six o’clock. There were on duty that night watch engineer Punch, who was in general charge, one Sheehan, an oiler, whose duties carried him to the engine room, the fire room and the pump room, one Morgan, as fireman, and the decedent as coal passer. Morgan had been working two hours before the decedent appeared. There were three furnaces in a row in the boiler room on the basement floor. The first work decedent did that night was to wheel coal to the furnaces, and before he did so Morgan said to him, “We will start to get some coal out.” Morgan then told him to clean the fire, which involved removing the ashes from-under the grate and putting it into cans, which work they did together. There were in the boiler room when they started work about thirty empty ash cans. After removing* the ashes from one grate they burned some rubbish- and next wheeled more coal and then cleaned another fire, and after that they started "to get more coal and were about to clean the third fire. Morgan testified that the decedent then opened the door of the third furnace and remarked that it was a pretty fat fire, pretty heavy one, he meant,” and walked away towards the elevator shaft; that at that time about twenty-six of the thirty empty cans had been filled; that as they finished cleaning the second fire the decedent asked Morgan if he had “ taken the rest of the cans out of the elevator shaft,” and was informed that he had; that the [563]*563accident occurred within two or three minutes thereafter, and that in the meantime he had been looking after the other fires and had not observed that decedent had passed into the elevator room; that he gave decedent no instructions or order to go there to get empty cans or for any other purpose and did not know why he went there; that nothing was said with respect to where the ashes from the third furnace, over and above what would go into the four empty cans, were to be put, but that on former occasions, before decedent was employed there, when the cans were all filled, the ashes were piled in the corner of the room against two walls in a bin formed by the walls and the filled cans; and he also testified that there were at the time of the accident some other empty cans in the elevator room back of the elevator where they were customarily put by the employees of the contractor who removed the ashes from the building. There is other testimony to the effect that defendant had fifty or fifty-two ash cans in all, and that the empty cans were left in the elevator room back of the elevator by the employees of the contractor who took up and emptied the full cans and brought the empties back down on the elevator; and that evidence also tends to show that there were at the time of the accident empty ash cans in the elevator room back of the elevator shaft proper. Other evidence also tends to show that one. of the duties of the coal passers was to take the empty ash cans from the elevator room into the boiler room; and that it was to the knowledge of defendant’s superintendent the custom, and it had not been forbidden, to pass back and forth across the elevator pit in so doing; and one witness testified that an ice box on the east of the elevator so narrowed the passageway on that, side that sufficient room was not left to carry the cans around the elevator pit on that side. It quite plainly appears that, the ash cans could not have been carried around on the westerly side. There is no evidence that decedent knew of the custom of storing the surplus ashes on the floor in the boiler room. Nor is there any evidence, other than herein stated, that he was given any instructions with respect to his duties or that he knew or was informed of the conditions in the elevator room or with respect to the elevator or its operation.

The defendant’s building is at the southeast comer of Broad[564]*564way and Leonard street. The hoist elevator shaft proper, which is not inclosed, is about five feet square, and is in a vault or room eleven by twelve feet in dimensions under the sidewalk and near the building line. This vault under the walk is connected with the boiler room and basement of the building by a sliding door in an opening four feet eight and one-half inches in width. The distance from the hoist elevator to the nearest boiler is about twenty-four feet. The passageway from the hoist to the boilers leads between two columns fifteen .feet apart, which were somewhat nearer the elevator room than the boilers. On one of these was a sixteen candle power electric light which shone through the sliding door into the elevator room.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 A.D. 560, 147 N.Y.S. 644, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6033, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fearon-v-new-york-life-insurance-nyappdiv-1914.