Floettl v. Third Avenue Railroad

10 A.D. 308, 41 N.Y.S. 792, 75 N.Y. St. Rep. 1191
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 10 A.D. 308 (Floettl v. Third Avenue Railroad) 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
Floettl v. Third Avenue Railroad, 10 A.D. 308, 41 N.Y.S. 792, 75 N.Y. St. Rep. 1191 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Patterson, J.:

This action was brought to recover damages for injuries sustained by the plaintiff, which injuries, it is alleged, resulted from the negligence of both the defendants. lie now appeals from the judgment entered upon a dismissal of his complaint at the trial. The Third • Avenue Railroad Company is a ■ corporation operating a line of street railway cars, moved by cable power, in the city of Hew York, and the defendant, the Jonson Company, is a manufacturing corporation engaged in the business of making and putting in place appliances or apparatus to move cable cars such as were used by the railroad company. On the 17th of March, 1894, the plaintiff was in the employment of the defendant, the Jonson Company, and had been in such employment for some months preceding that date. On the day named the Jonson Company, by its employees or operatives, was, as an independent contractor, doing certain work for the Third Avenue Railroad Company about and under its track, and this plaintiff was one of such operatives or hands engaged in doing some of that work, at a point in Park row, in the city of Hew York, opposite the Times newspaper building. It appears that at the place indicated, a trench or excavation had been dug under the bed of the easterly track of the railroad company, and that it was necessary for some of the employees of the Jonson Company to go into this hole or trench and there do the work of drilling holes through a yoke, which was part of the apparatus connected with the subterranean running equipment of the railroad company’s system. This hole or trench is described as not being deeper than one foot from the level at which the rails rested, that is, below the bottom of the rails. To get in this trench, [311]*311those who worked in it first laid themselves on their backs, “ caught hold of the rail with both hands, and then pulled ourselves in in that way under the rail and towards the cable and then the work that we had to do was at these yokes.” This plaintiff, having entered in that way, worked at a, yoke on the east side and had his face turned towards the east when the accident happened. It appears that early in the morning of the day on which the accident occurred the plaintiff had been at work in this trench ; that he came out and remained out for about an hour and a half, when the foreman of the Jonson Company directed him to go down again. To this the plaintiff objected, saying that he could not work there, that he was too large a man for it and had not room to work, whereupon the foreman said to him: You have to go in there; the work has to be finished by five o’clock; * * * the cars will stop till five o’clock.” Then the plaintiff said: “ What will I do in there if it does come ? ” To which the foreman replied : “ The car will stop. Go down.” It was testified that the plaintiff was in the hole only half an hour before he was hurt, and the accident occurred about fifteen or twenty minutes past four o’clock in the morning. It was yet dark. The plaintiff and those working with him were lifting up shafting upon the yoke when Mr. Jonson cried out: Look out, Floettl and Wein, the car is coming.” It did come and stopped over the trench. The cable began to move, and its vibration annoyed the plaintiff, and he instinctively raised his hands and caught the rail; the car started, and a wheel of the car passed over his fingers and cut them off. The car came from the south, moved by a slow cable as it came along Park row up to the point at which the plaintiff was working. There it stopped immediately over the hole in which the plaintiff was at work. It remained stationary long enough to take up a speedier cable to which it was to be attached at that point. The plaintiff grasped the rail between the front and rear wheels of the car; the motion was imparted to the car while the plaintiff was still grasping the rail, and the injury ensued in manner as stated, the plaintiff’s fingers being cut off by the rear wheel of the car. Upon that state of the proof, the learned judge at the trial dismissed the complaint, holding that the evidence was insufficient to show negligence on the part of either the railroad company or of the Jonson Company.

As affecting the railroad company, the disposition of the cause [312]*312made -by the learned judge was right. There was no negligence whatever on the part of that company, or any of its agents or servants, leading to the injuries suffered by the plaintiff. He was not an employee of the railroad company; that company owed him no further duty than such as it owed to any person lawfully in the street or to any person working upon or under the tracks to the knowledge of its officers or servants. The foreman of the Jonson Company was in no sense or manner authorized by the railroad company to make any statement or give any assurance to the plaintiff connected with the operation of the railroad company’s road or the running of its cars. It was doubtless bound to run those cars with regard to the safety of any one at work upon the apparatus connected with the running of its cars. The evidence is altogether insufficient to show that that was not done, or that the car was not carefully operated, or that the railroad company’s servants in charge of the car were in any way remiss in any duty they owed to any person. The car reached the point at which it stopped, to take up the speedier cable, without injury to any one, and there is nothing to show that those operating the car had any knowledge that any one was in the trench, nor is it shown that the cable was negligently operated. The fingers of the plaintiff were cut off by the rear wheel of the car, the plaintiff’s hand grasping the rail between the front and rear wheels wdiile the car was motionless. It is impossible to see, without some evidence to show that the railroad company’s servants knew, or ought to have known, that someone was in the trench, how it can be made responsible for the starting of the car without giving warning. The testimony was entirely inadequate to make out a case of negligence against the railroad company, and the complaint with regard to it was, therefore, properly dismissed.

But with reference to the defendant, the Jonson Company, there was enough in the testimony to go to the jury on the plaintiff’s contention that the company did not furnish to him that protection to which he was entitled in view of the assurance which he had received from the foreman. This view does not result in this case from the application of the rule that an employer is bound to furnish to his servant a safe place in which to work. Where the danger is known to the employee, he has an opportunity to decline the service. If, under ordinary circumstances, and with full knowledge [313]*313of the danger, he enters upon that service, he takes the risk of his employment precisely in the same way that he would take the risk of operating dangerous machinery known to him to he dangerous. (Hickey v. Taaffe, 105 N. Y. 26; Cahill v. Hilton, 106 id. 512; Cullen v. National Sheet Metal Roofing Co., 114 id. 45; Shields v. N Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 133 id. 557.) As was said in the case of McGovern v. Central Vermont R. R. Co. (123 N. Y. 287): “ If the servant puts himself in the way of dangerous machinery with knowledge of its character, or places himself in the way of bodies moving in their accustomed orbit with irresistible force, and is thereby injured, it will generally be regarded as the result of his own carelessness, but if he is engaged in a business which may be.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 A.D. 308, 41 N.Y.S. 792, 75 N.Y. St. Rep. 1191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floettl-v-third-avenue-railroad-nyappdiv-1896.