Flower v. Buck

173 A.D. 506, 159 N.Y.S. 1042, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6675

This text of 173 A.D. 506 (Flower v. Buck) 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
Flower v. Buck, 173 A.D. 506, 159 N.Y.S. 1042, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6675 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

The complaint in this action alleges that on or about the 3d day of February, 1914, at the city of Troy, while the plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant, engaged in and about the repair of a Stanley steamer car, owned by the defendant, by [507]*507direction and order of defendant, in the exercise of due care and diligence and without any fault or negligence upon his part, plaintiff was seriously and permanently injured by reason of the unsafe, unlighted, greasy, oily, narrow, small and unfit place provided for and in which plaintiff was by defendant directed to work at the time of said injury and the failure and neglect of defendant to furnish and supply plaintiff with necessary and usual appliances customarily employed and in general use in the garage and automobile repair business, which was a part of defendant’s business, commonly known and called, a “ creeper ” and a £< lead-light,” the remainder of this allegation being devoted to the description of a creeper and a lead-light. This is followed by an allegation that at said time and place the floor or surface upon which said steamer car was then placed and at which said plaintiff was by defendant directed to work was wet, dirty, greasy and unhealthful, and by reason of such conditions then existing, plaintiff refused to work upon said steamer car by resting his back and body upon said wet and unclean floor for the reason that said place was unfit, unsafe and unhealthful place upon which to lie or rest, and was by defendant directed to work at said repair of said Stanley steamer car by entering in the body or box of said car and lifting or raising two doors in the floor or bottom of said car to make an opening or space in the floor of said car through which to work at and about the repair of the engine and machinery of said steamer car. * .* * That while plaintiff was engaged at and about the work of repairing the engine of said steamer car in said crouched, cramped, stooping and bending position with plaintiff’s left hand resting upon the upturned part of the door as aforesaid, which said upturned part of said door was resting back and upon the floor of said steamer car, said left hand slipped upon the surface of a part of said raised door by reason of oil and grease coated, and being thereon, which said oil and grease was and had been allowed to accumulate and remain for a long time thereon prior to the happening of said injuries, thereby causing the body of the plaintiff to plunge and dip downward and, by reason of the stooped, bended and crouching position of the body of the plaintiff with his legs straddled over and across the said opening in the bottom of the floor of said [508]*508steamer car and the limited and narrow confines of the body or box of said steamer car in the part thereof where plaintiff was working, plaintiff was prevented and arrested from stopping the said downward movement of his body and as a result of such downward movement plaintiff’s right hand reached and came in contact with and was thrust against and * touched the engine crank of said steamer car at the place upon the engine of said steamer car where the engine frame bolt entered in the comb in the crank shaft and, while plaintiff’s said hand was in said position to become crushed, maimed and parts thereof severed by the engine balance of said engine coming in contact with and meeting said engine crank in the operation of said machinery, causing, the severance of parts of the second and third fingers of plaintiff’s right hand, and pain and nervous shock, and plaintiff thereafter suffered,” etc.

These allegations are followed by an allegation that a notice was served under the provisions of the Employers’ Liability Act, and the case went to trial and was submitted to a jury, which has returned a verdict for $500, which the trial court refused to set aside. The answer put in issue the material allegations'of the complaint, and the verdict rests substantially upon the testimony of the plaintiff, who is squarely contradicted by the defendant upon the most material points in the evidence, and the defendant is corroborated by a disinterested witness who was present at the time of the accident and who saw all of the surrounding facts, though he did not witness the immediate accident. The verdict is so clearly against the weight of evidence that it ought not to be supported here.

The mere fact that the plaintiff alleged and proved that he filed a notice, such as would be required in an action under the Employers’ Liability Act, does not serve to bring the case within the purview of that statute unless the facts pleaded are such as to give the plaintiff the benefits of the act. There is no allegation in the complaint of any “defect in the condition of the ways, works, machinery, or plant, connected with or used in the business of the employer” (Labor Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 31; Laws of 1909, chap. 86], § 200, as amd. by Laws of 1910, chap. 352), by reason of which the plaintiff received any injury. The only defect suggested is that the [509]*509floor of the garage was wet, dirty, greasy and unhealthful, but the plaintiff himself declares that he recognized this condition and that he refused to work in such wet, dirty, greasy and unhealthful situation, and as his employment lasted less than three hours, and he is not alleged to have contracted any disease, we may safely conclude that the alleged condition of the floor was not the proximate cause of his injuries. The only other allegations of negligence are that the defendant then directed the plaintiff to enter the box or body of the car and to perform his work from that point, and that the defendant failed to provide for him a “creeper” and a “lead-light.” The creeper, which is described in the complaint, is merely a board with a head-rest, provided with small wheels, which enables the person making repairs from the under side of a car to get under the machine with greater ease than by crawling under, and it could not have any bearing upon this case, except that if he had had this “creeper” he might possibly have performed his work from the under side of the car. But this was not a public garage; the defendant was engaged as a common carrier, using two automobiles, and the garage was used for storing his cars, and there appear to have been the tools and appliances for the ordinary incidental repairs, but the repairing of automobiles was no part of his business, for the evidence is uncontradicted that the only cars which were there, or which were in any manner repaired, were the two cars of the defendant, and it can hardly be seriously contended that the failure of the defendant to have a “ creeper” in his private garage was in any proper sense a defect in the plant of a man engaged as a common carrier, making no pretense of catering to the public as an owner of a garage. The plaintiff was called in, not to repair a car, but to connect up the steam apparatus of this particular car, such connections having been taken out in transporting the car, and the plaintiff was brought into the matter because he was familiar with the work, having previously been employed to drive it for the defendant. It was a mere special employment for a few hours in a particular piece of work which the defendant could not do, and the relation of master and servant can hardly be said to exist in such a case, in the sense of the [510]*510Employers’ Liability Act. The plaintiff was more in the attitude of an independent contractor, and the absence of a “ creeper” had no more to do with the accident than it.had to do with the weather on that particular day.

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Bluebook (online)
173 A.D. 506, 159 N.Y.S. 1042, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flower-v-buck-nyappdiv-1916.