Kain v. . Smith

89 N.Y. 375, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 230
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 13, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 89 N.Y. 375 (Kain v. . Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kain v. . Smith, 89 N.Y. 375, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 230 (N.Y. 1882).

Opinion

Danfobth, J.

The plaintiff was nonsuited at the Circuit upon a ground not now claimed to be tenable, and the judgment was reversed and a new trial ordered by the General Term, because in their opinion the case was one proper for submission to the jury. Hpon this appeal the learned and ingenious counsel for the defendant submits the following propositions as reasons for reversing the order and restoring the judgment. First. Plaintiff’s negligence contributed to the accident. Second. There was no negligence on the part of the defendant or his subordinates, which caused the injury. The learned counsel has frankly accepted a recent decision of this court, as embodying the rule of law by which the defendant must abide in seeking for an answer to these propositions, viz.: “To justify a nonsuit on the ground of coücurring negligence, the negligence must appear so clearly that no construction of the evidence, or inference drawn from the facts, would have -warranted a contrary conclusion, and that a verdict the other way would have been set aside as against evidence. (Stackus v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 79 N. Y. 464.)

*379 I have carefully examined the testimony in the light of the earnest argument of the appellant’s counsel, and am unable to find any conduct of the plaintiff, which in judgment of law contributed to the injury. In this respect, so far as I can discover, we are in accord with the trial judge, as we are with the General Term. But what is the case? The "defendant was, for the purposes of this question, a railroad proprietor, the employer and master of the plaintiff (80 N. Y. 458), and as such bound to furnish him, in the performance of any duty required at his hands, proper, adequate and perfect implements and appliances necessary for such proposed work. This obligation was implied as part of the contract of service, and in the absence of notice to the contrary, the plaintiff had a right to- assume that it would be performed. Moreover, he was ignorant of the duties of his place, of the kind and proper qualities and fashion of machinery which would be given him to use. But of these things the defendant had knowledge. On that also the plaintiff might prudently rely.

Before the 1st of May, 1872, he was a sailor and carpenter. At that time he went into the defendant’s employment in the capacity of a carpenter — a car repairer — and was placed under one Forrest, the foreman in the old shop and yard,” and on the day in question, May 27, 1872, was directed by him to go with others and get a certain implement called a “ jigger,” and load wheels upon a flat car.- Before that time he had neither loaded car-wheels, nor seen any loaded, nor did he know what a jigger was. The car-wheels were two wheels fastened on an axle, together weighing upwards of twelve hundred pounds, and were then standing on the track, about one hundred and fifty feet from the car. The jigger was between ten and twelve feet long; the car three and one-half feet high; one end of the jigger was placed upon the car, the other on the track; six or seven men were engaged with the plaintiff in loading the wheels. “Forrest was there, seeing that the wheels were loaded. He was giving directions about it.” They shoved two pairs of wheels up without running them on the track. Some one said, “ the best plan was to run the *380 wheels, give them, a headway and they would run" half way up the jigger without any shoving.” Forrest was there, standing within ear-shot, close to the car. “ This was done successfully with all but two pairs, when, as the plaintiff says, “ the last pair we run up, the jigger fell off, and the wheel jumped round and broke my leg.” He was between the rails on the track, and between the rails of the jigger. He says, while I was lying there I looked at the jigger. I didn’t know what it was that gave way and let the wheel down,and the first place I looked at was at the grabs that were on the end of the jigger—the hooks that go over and pass down. I saw that one of them looked blunt and short. It appeared to be about three-quarters of an inch thick at the edge where it should have been sharp. It was blunt instead of being sharp. * * * The jigger when it fell did not fall completely to the ground; one end of it hung on the car and the other end fell down. By the ends I mean what I call the grabs. The right side fell off, and the left remained on. When I was lying there on the ground I took particular notice in looking at the grab on the right side, to see what gave away, and I thought it looked shorter than the other one.”

A jigger is described as consisting of two side pieces of equal length, two cross pieces with bolts or tenons through them, fastening to the side pieces, and iron hooks, or grabs, at one end, so pointed as to fasten on the car and keep the jigger in place. The end of the right side of this jigger was worn off, and so was Shorter than the other, and the plaintiff says “ that made a jump which caused the jar.” That side swung from the car and the right wheel of the two fell from it. He saw this after, but not before he was hurt ; did not before notice it. “The jigger,” he says, “slipped down and the wheel jumped round and struck me on the leg.”

Sdhrier testified that the jigger, if properly constructed, would fit square on to the track, and present no abrupt point; that, going at a slow run, if the jigger is properly constructed, there is no reason why the car-wheels should jump. “ I should consider if it struck it on a run at all it would jump. I should *381 consider it is according to the fastness of the run. I should not consider that if after a wheel has jumped up, it runs right along straight up the jigger, the fact that the running has been adopted to force it along, has any effect whatever upon the running up the rest of the way, if it was going all straight. The jigger should he constructed so that the grabs should be sharp to hold them to their place, not necessarily too sharp, but sharp enough to hold them to the bed of the car; the weight of the wheels would hold them. I can’t say how long they should be for a teii or twelve-foot jigger; long enough to hold, long enough so that they have a proper bearing on the car. They should not be blunt at the ends.”

Curheau testifies that he was one of those engaged at the same time with plaintiff in loading these wheels; it was his first experience in that business. He says, “ the bottom end of the jigger, as it rested on the rail, was broomed up, affected in both ends and running along up the jigger. I mean by brooming up, as though you took a stick in your mouth and chewed it, and the end was broken off. It was an old break ; one was broken off more than the other” ; he thinks the right hand stringer. He says, “between the breaking, and what was worn off, I think there must have been two inches or more broken off. I mean,” he says, “ it was two inches short, it was partly broomed up six or eight inches, and all the way up the jigger where the wheel ran. Both sides were pretty well worn in the joints. Those cross bars were defective, the joints were loose, so that the jigger would weave in that way; if there was a heavy pressure come on one side or the other it would have a tendency to break up.”

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Bluebook (online)
89 N.Y. 375, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kain-v-smith-ny-1882.