Kusnir v. Pressed Steel Car Co.

201 F. 146, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1014
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 31, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 201 F. 146 (Kusnir v. Pressed Steel Car Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kusnir v. Pressed Steel Car Co., 201 F. 146, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1014 (S.D.N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge.

The plaintiff at the time of the transaction complained of, about April 18, 1910, was a common laborer in the-employ of the defendant corporation at its manufacturing plant in the state of Pennsylvania. He has and had a wife and three children. He is now doing odd jobs, such as his physical condition will permit. He was then working at piece work as a riveter of cars, and earned' from $30 to $35 each two' weeks. On the trial, October 28, 1912, it was evident that he was not able to do a full day’s work of hard manual labor by reason of the condition of his arm, which had been broken and, to an extent, shattered above the elbow by a pistol ball fired by one Charles P. Smith, known in the record also as Captain-Smith', who at the time of the transaction in question was in the employ of the defendant company as an armed watchman, and was also a police officer of the state, commissioned by the government of said: state of Pennsylvania.

The defendant was and is a corporation of the state of Pennsylvania, engaged in manufacturing pressed steel cars, and had an extensive plant and employed hundreds of men. There was evidence-[148]*148tending to show, and which justified a finding, that April 18, 1910, one of the men in defendant’s employment had been discharged; that there was disaffection in the department to which he belonged; and in which Kusnir was employeid; that there had been some talk of a strike, and that defendant had some reason to apprehend one, and had determined to send the men home that morning without letting them go to work as the best means of averting trouble. In anticipation of some possible disorder, Smith, as an armed watchman in the employment of the defendant, was there at its instance and pursuant to such employment to act in its behalf, if occasion demanded. On the! morning of the 18th, the men came to the number of several hundred, Kusnir being one, and after having taken their tools, but before going to work, were ordered home. They were entitled to a reasonable, time in which to depart, and it was, of course, the duty of these men to depart in a quiet and an orderly manner, doing no violence. Smith, as stated, was there armeld at the instance of the defendant, and as its employé and servant, to aid, if necessary, in keeping order and in protecting the property of the defendant. As a duly commissioned police officer of the state he unquestionably had the right, and it was his duty, if he saw a crime being'committed, even there to apprehend the offender, even without process. On these questions the court charged the jury, and no exception was taken and there was no request'to charge differently, as follows:

“Smith, the officer who did the shooting, and he admits that he d.á the shooting, was commissioned by the state of Pennsylvania, or its Governor, as an officer of the peace, and-, of course-, had the right, in the exercise- of the police power of that state and. the administering of the criminal lav. $ and enforcing them, to arrest any one engaged in the commission of a crime in his presence. lie was a peace officer at this time, and held his cominlí sion ; but he was employed at this particular time by tbe defendant eómpanj, and represented it in the keeping of order and the protection and -preserving of its property against unlawful acts, and riotous conduct, if ¿ny there should be. in its shops and on its premises, and was employed to keep order and preserve the peace, and was kept there at this particular time, ¿hi had been for some little time before, by the defendant company. Smith occupied a sort of a dual position, in this: As- a peace officer, commissioned by the Governor of the state, of course, if he saw an offense being committed, a violation of the criminal law, he had the right as such officer, even without a warrant, to make an arrest to preserve the peace, and see that the Is w was properly enforced in that regard by arresting the offender. That rignt he had by virtue of the commission, irrespéctive of- whether he was engaged by the defendant or not — irrespective of whether or not he was in the employ of the defendant company to preserve the peace against riotous conduct, unlawful acts, even on its property, and protect and preserve its property. For all such acts of Smith defendant is not liable. But he was employed there by the defendant company to protect its property, and therefore, at the time in question, was, admittedly, the alter ego of the company; that is, he-represented in that respect, for that purpose, the company. Of course, the company itself had the right to protect its property against riotous conduct, and to have men there on its property to preserve the peace, and it was the duty of the men in the employ of the company, when, they were not at work, .under reasonable rules and regulations, to leave the premises of the defendant eompáhy in a quiet, peaceable, and orderly manner. Of course; they haó a reasonable time to come and a reasonable time to go under’ ordinary ’circumstances.” . '

[149]*149Kusnir, the plaintiff, claimed, and gave evidence tending to show, and which justified the jury in finding, that he was departing in a quiet and a peaceable manner, doing no harm, creating no disorder, and neither committing nor attempting to commit any offense, or violate any law, or any rule or regulation, when he saw Smith in his path, armed and engaged in an altercation with a big Russian; that he was afraid, and to avoid danger and injury dodged under a table •of steel rails or beams; that the Russian escaped Smith, who excitedly and negligeintly mistook Kusnir for the escaping Russian, and pursued him, and, as he endeavored to get from under the beams andigo away, that Smith carelessly and negligently and wrongfully, seeking to keep order pursuant to his employment by defendant, first struck plaintiff on the head, and then, he not coming out, reached down and with his revolver or pistol willfully, negligently, and unnecessarily shot plaintiff through the arm as he was on his hands and knees, doing no harm and committing no violence. The plaintiff claimed, and gave evidence tending to show, and which justifield the jury in finding, that the ball entered the arm on the outer part of the same some distance above the elbow, and, having broken the bone, was shattered into fragments, which were driven downward towards the elbow, where they are now imbedded in the flesh and muscles, and that only a small part of the bullet passed out. The bone, not having .united, was at a later time wired together, and the wound has never healed, and still discharges, and there is still dead bone in the arm.

The contention of the defendant was and is that, as the men were going out, there was much disorder and many threats, and that Kusnir attacked Smith with a heavy piece of iron, and then dodged under the table of rails or beams, and later came out and seized Smith about the body with both arms from behind, pinioning him to a degree, and was endeavoring to gain possession of Smith’s revolver, when he (Smith) as missiles were being thrown by others which endangered him, got out his revolver and, placing the muzzle against the inside of Kusnir’s arm just above the elbow, fired, not intending to kill, and that the bullet entered on the inside, broke the bone, and passed upwardly and out on the outer side of the arm and higher up; that is, at the place where Kusnir and his witnesses say it entered.

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Bluebook (online)
201 F. 146, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1014, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kusnir-v-pressed-steel-car-co-nysd-1912.