Rosenstein v. McCutcheon

155 A.D. 278, 140 N.Y.S. 315, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5095
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 21, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 155 A.D. 278 (Rosenstein v. McCutcheon) 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
Rosenstein v. McCutcheon, 155 A.D. 278, 140 N.Y.S. 315, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5095 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Jenks, P. J.:

This action is brought under the Employers’ Liability Act. The servant, an adult who had been in employ for five months as a liftman, was required to clean the machinery of the lift on every Saturday. When cleaning the governor of the machinery above the shaft of the lift, he stood upon a girder that was below the governor, and kept his foothold by clinging with his left arm to an angle iron that was level with his chest. The cables of the lift ran semi-horizontally four or five inches above his shoulder. While thus engaged, and the cables were moving, his left arm was torn from his body.

There were no witnesses of the casualty and the version of the plaintiff is vague. He says, “ all of a sudden I felt a tug on the shoulder and my arm was off.” There is nothing more definite save, in repeating his story, he adds that after the tug he found the cable off the wheel, that he felt that (i. e., referring to the foreign force) must be the cable, that he “did not see where it [his arm] was being pulled or what was pulling it; ” again, “I did not see anything. I know the cable was on my arm and the arm was off.” And once again: “At the time that the cable was on my arm I don’t remember whether the cable was still on the sheave. I was unconscious after I felt the tug.” Thus while we may conclude that if the cables had not been working this casualty would not have happened, the manner of contact between the plaintiff and the cables or the immediate machinery that moved responsive to the cables does not appear. The plaintiff was bound to prove causal negligence. He was not confined to one specific act of negligence, but he was compelled to offer evidence that permitted [280]*280the logical conclusion that some negligent act was the cause of his injury. As is said by the court in Morris v. Railway Co. (148 N. Y. 185, 186): “Negligence is not to be presumed; but to justify the submission of that question to a jury, there must be more than a mere surmise that there may have been negligence on the part of the defendant. There must be evidence upon which the jury might reasonably and properly conclude that there was negligence.” In Dobbins v. Brown (119 N. Y. 193) the court say: “ The omission to use such care has been held to be negligence, rendering the employer liable for damages occasioned by it; but such neglect must be proved, either by direct evidence or the proof of facts from which the inference of negligence can be legitimately drawn by the jury. It cannot be supported by mere conjecture or surmise, but must be made referable by the proof to some specific cause or defect. It has been held that the mere fact that an accident occurred which caused an injury, is not generally, of itself, sufficient to authorize an inference of negligence against a defendant. (Curtis v. R. & S. R. R. Co., 18 N. Y. 534.) ” (See, too, Patton v. Texas & Pacific Railway Co., 119 U. S. 658.) The contention of the respondent is that the defendant was negligent in ordering or permitting a cleaning of this machinery when the lift was in use, so that the cables must move, and in working the lift with defective, old, worn and loose cables. The proposition naturally divides itself into two parts, the mere working of the lift at the time of the cleaning, and the working of the lift in its condition of equipment.

First, as to the contention that the master was negligent in ordering or permitting the cleaning of such machinery while the lift was working. I am not satisfied that the plaintiff established general custom. He called but a single witness, who specified five buildings and who said that he knew of “possibly fifty” others, and knew “generally around the city of New York ” where the machinery was shut down when such cleaning was done; but upon cross-examination he but specified two buildings, adding, however, there were several others which he could not specify. He admitted that he was not in the habit of going about “to see how they clean elevators,” that he personally had rarely seen any cleaning, that he had [281]*281seen cleaning three times in the last two years, and possibly twenty-seven times in the last eighteen years, and finally, “ To a certain extent my familiarity with the manner in which the overhead machinery was cleaned in the various buildings in and about New York city, was obtained from my exchange of views with men who were superintendents in those buildings. Possibly the greater part of my familiarity was obtained in that way.” Usage is a matter of fact, not of opinion, and must be shown by those who have observed the method of transacting the particular kind of business as conducted by themselves and others. ” (Rickerson v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 149 N. Y. 316, citing authorities.) Among those authorities is Mills v. Hallock (2 Edw. Ch. 652), in which case it was said: “ A custom must be proved by evidence of facts (and not by mere speculative opinions), by means of witnesses who have had frequent and actual experience of the custom. The testimony of those who speak from report only, and not from particular instances within their own knowledge, if receivable at all, is of no weight: 4 Starkie, 452.” While there may be no hard and fast rule as to the number of instances, Labatt on Master and Servant (§ 53) suggests that such number should be relatively large when compared with the whole. But conceding for the argument that the plaintiff gave sufficient evidence to justify a conclusion that the defendant violated the general custom, the question remains as to the conduct of the plaintiff. And the law of this case for that trial was established by the instruction of the learned court without objection, exception or requested modification: “if the plaintiff during a period of five months had weekly cleaned the elevator machinery above the shaft, and that one of the elevators was in motion during the time, and he had made no objection to that method of cleaning, that he assumed the necessary and obvious risks of that situation.” For the undisputed proof brings the plaintiff within the purview of the instruction.

Second, as to the contention that the master was negligent in working the lift with defective, old, worn and loose cables.” As I have said, the precise cause of the accident was not shown. Indeed, the learned counsel for the respondent says in his points: The only proof on the subject is given by [282]*282the plaintiff wherein he says that while he was cleaning the governor, with his hand on the angle iron under the cable, the cables moved, his arm was caught, and the cable was off the wheel.” But he contends that the proof shows that the cables were old and worn, that broken strands were sticking like pins out from the cables and the cables rattled, “from which,” he says, “ the inference follows that they were loose.” And it is further called to our attention that there was proof “ that this elevator started with a jerk. ”

I think that there was not evidence, or at least sufficient evidence, to show that the mere fact that the cables had become old and worn indicated that such condition had any causal relation to the casualty. And there is no evidence that establishes or tends to establish the fact that, even if the cables were loose or even if the elevator started with a jerk, these defects caused the accident.

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Bluebook (online)
155 A.D. 278, 140 N.Y.S. 315, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenstein-v-mccutcheon-nyappdiv-1913.