Rogers v. Macbeth

123 A.D. 571, 108 N.Y.S. 74, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 117
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 10, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 123 A.D. 571 (Rogers v. Macbeth) 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
Rogers v. Macbeth, 123 A.D. 571, 108 N.Y.S. 74, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 117 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Jenks, J.:

In this- action the servant recovered a verdict of $5,000 for personal injuries dne to her master’s negligence. The court denied the motion for a new trial, for the r.eason. that it was powerless to dismiss the complaint absolutely, and that it was convinced that any new trial might cast heavier damages upon the defendant. The court thought that no other jury could be more intelligent or more conscientious, and, therefore, that any jury would err as did this jury in framing 'some occult theory whereby out of pity it would mulct the master in damages. The court made this disposition of the motion although it expressly said that it was" not con[572]*572ceivable that twelve sane men could find it possible that a servant like the plaintiff could under lier conditions be so ignorant of the work she was doing and its peril, or that the master could be so indifferent of the safety, of his servant and her fellows, and of his own interest, as to permit her to work "for him in .ignorance of the perils. The coiirt stamped the plaintiff’s story as unreasonable, improbable," unbelievable. This deliverance came from a judge strong at nisi prius, of wide experience, of great wisdom and sound common-sense, one who did not jump at conclusions, who held his temper under complete control, and who had withal warm sympathy for his fellow-men. I cannot but feel that this disposition of the motion was paternalism foreign to judicial function. If the defendant chose to hazard another trial, it was not for the court to seek to save him from himself by withholding from him that which the court thought lie was entitled to receive. Tlie court could not even forecast the final issue. And its disposition of the motion was rather upon the theories of Gustave Le Bon (“The Crowd,” p. 170 et seq.) than upon an exercise of the judgment required by the law. Even sympathy does not hold equal sway with every set of twelve indifferent men sworn to make true deliverance upon the evidence.. I have read this. record of course mindful of. the trial court’s opinion, but I think not dominated by it, and I have arrived at the conclusion that the judgment should not stand in that it is against the weight of the evidence. ' The servant complained of many shortcomings of the master which were asserted to be negligence, but the court without objection submitted the case to the jury upon the question whether the plaintiff was informed of the inherent danger of her occupation. The defendant manufactured fuses to explode dynamite cartridges used for blasting. The plaintiff, an intelligent woman of twenty years, was in his service for a year. For a time she worked in -the box department, later in the wire' department and for the last three months of her term at a paraffine table. The fuse consisted of a brass "shell in circumference smaller than a common lead pencil and was made elsewhere. This shell was charged with fulminate of mercury, and attached to the cartridge thus máde was a wire, which served to connect the cartridge with an electric-battery which exploded the cartridge when thé" cartridge had been.placed inside of the dynamite" bomb used to. fire a blast. Fulminate [573]*573of mercury was kept wet and packed in sawdust in the defendant’s yard, and. only so much as was immediately needed was brought into a room of the defendant’s factory. The cartridges were charged in that room by the foreman or Superintendent of the workmen and her assistant. Then they were taken into another room and given 100 at a time to the filling girl or girls. The filling girl sealed the cartridges, putting tight onto each one an iron disk, block or plug, and then poured .over this disk hot sulphur, which also served to set and to hold fast the wire. It then became the duty of another set of employees to fetch the cartridges to a table called the paraffine table and there to dip each one into heated paraffine. This was to make the cartridge waterproof. - Before applying par-affine, the employee was required to pick off with her finger any superfluous bits of sulphur from a cartridge in order, I take it,- to present a smooth surface for the paraffine application. This plaintiff was at the paraffine table and the'work last described was her work. It appears that on the day in question there was an explosion of the cartridges at or near or on her table, and in consequence the plaintiff lost one eye and suffered impairment of the other. There are two versions as to the cause of the explosion, but the learned court did not attach vital importance to the determination of the truth of either version, for it instructed the jury that, if the plaintiff was ttitally uninformed of the inherent danger of the master’s business, her recovery did not depend on the determination of the truth as between the two versions-. I shall discuss these verO sions later. It suffices now to state that there is no contention that the explosion was due to any act of the master or of any other one of his servants ; but that the explosion was due to the handling of a cartridge or of cartridges by the plaintiff herself. Her testimony is that when she was transferred to the paraffine table Elizabeth Hart, the foreman or superintendent, said to the plaintiff that she was going to put her upstairs, and told Miss Donovan, a young woman in the paraffine department, “ Hellie, you learn Lottie how to paraffine.” The plaintiff testifies that before that time Miss Hart had never informed her of any danger of the employment or of any danger that might be incurred at the paraffine table. She further testifies that'slie only knew that the place was called an electrical shop, that she never knew what the fuses were, that [574]*574she never had made inquiry as to their-use and that she never liad discussed, their use with any of her .fellows nor they with her. She testifies that she liad no idea that there was any explosive used in these cartridges, that she never asked -any question about them, that it never occurred to her ■ that a cartridge was dangerous, that. she never thought anything about it. She also testified that, she had never heard any sound of explosions in the place.. She. was shaken on her cross-examination to .the extent that she admitted that she knew that they must not touch the cartridges on the filling table, and that there had heen a discussion among the women of: there being danger in the shop, and although there was nothing., said about the danger being due to the use of .e-xplosives she did-not know just what it was.' Her witness Donovan who, .the plaintiff says, was her instructor at the paraffine table, testifies that she did-not warn the plaintiff that there was any danger in the work. Indeed she testifies that she had. no idea of what she Was working at — not the slightest, that there never was talk of danger among the workmen, that she had not the remotest idea for what the fuses were used, that she did not know what a fuse was or what a cartridge was, that she had never heard even of a rifle. Another witness of the occurrence was almost' equally ignorant, and like the plaintiff had .never heard any explosions. The defendant had closed out all of his interest in the business before "this trial. ,1 note this fact for the reason that of all -the witnesses called, by him, save Elizabeth Hart, of whom many"'were fellow-servants of the" plaintiff, none was' subject to the criticism that she was .testifying for her. employer. Miss Elizabeth-Hart, employed for 15 years and.supei- , intendent of the fuse" department, .employed the plaintiff. ' She testifies that she told the plaintiff of the character' of the place* that they were making fuses to blast rock and that her work was dangerous and very dirty, that she must use great caution, that no.

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Pearsall v. Macbeth
180 A.D. 851 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
123 A.D. 571, 108 N.Y.S. 74, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-macbeth-nyappdiv-1908.