Scharff v. Jackson

180 A.D. 792, 168 N.Y.S. 311, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9120

This text of 180 A.D. 792 (Scharff v. Jackson) 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
Scharff v. Jackson, 180 A.D. 792, 168 N.Y.S. 311, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9120 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Kellogg, P. J.:

Upon a former appeal (161 App. Div. 906) we affirmed a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, by a divided court. The [793]*793Court of Appeals (216 N. Y. 598) reversed that judgment upon the merits. That court does not. review questions of fact, but bases its action upon questions of law only. Its decision meant that the judgment was erroneous because there were no facts shown upon which it could rest and, therefore, it was erroneous as matter of law.

We refer to the statement of facts made by the Court of Appeals. The plaintiff now contends that he has brought additional elements into the case. He urges that upon the former trial it was a mere matter of inference that the floor shook or vibrated when the loaded truck was moving over it at the time the bags fell, while now that fact affirmatively appears. This is a purely technical view of the evidence. Upon the former trial it appeared that the floor shook or vibrated whenever a loaded truck passed over it; therefore, necessarily, it must have shaken when the loaded truck passed over it upon this occasion. The Court of Appeals must have assumed the existence of every reasonable inference which this court might have found from the evidence.

The principal additional evidence alleged is that the testimony of Leonard and of the plaintiff shows that the bags of cement were piled with the lower course removed a little from the wall, and that each course placed upon it was placed nearer the wall, so that as you reached the top of the pile the bags were leaning against the wall on either side, with the result that they would not fall over into the passageway. Leonard apparently knew nothing about this pile of bags of cement in the northeast corner of the building; he was clearly swearing as to the ordinary method of piling bags of cement, and evidently where it could be done the method described by him would be proper. The plaintiff swears to the same effect in a general way; but the evidence of both of these witnesses is destroyed by the cross-examination of the plaintiff and the actual situation in that corner. The manner of piling described by them was impossible in the northeast corner, for the reason that a few feet from the corner, on the north and on the east side, were doors which slid into the corner, so that it was impossible that the bags could rest against the wall of the building upon either side. On plaintiff’s cross-examination he admits that he swore upon the other [794]*794trial, and he wants to be understood upon this trial as saying, that the bags did not touch the side of the building or of the doors on either side, but that there was a space both at the top and the bottom of the pile of about six inches between the cement and the side of the building. So that if the evidence as to the proper method of piling bags amounts to anything, it shows conclusively that the bags in the northeast corner were not properly piled.

The defendant corporation took over this building and contents December 29, 1910, with the plaintiff and the other employees who had been working for the former owner. This accident took place February 16, 1911. The plaintiff swears that these bags were piled two months at least before the accident. They were, therefore, piled by the former owner and while the plaintiff was the principal man piling and removing cement from the building. The record, therefore, does not save the plaintiff from the objection placed by the Court of Appeals against his recovery.

Upon the former trial it appeared that bags of cement had fallen in the warehouse before the accident. It is now alleged that the evidence upon that subject is a little more elaborate than it was upon the former trial. That is immaterial, because the Court of Appeals, on reviewing the facts, was bound to take the evidence in the most favorable view to the plaintiff. Therefore, the evidence upon this trial does not strengthen the evidence upon the other trial with reference to the falling of the bags on previous occasions.

The warehouse was a large room with one floor, about 50 by 100 feet, and in the basement were pillars or posts, supported on which, and upon the foundation walls, were sleepers, upon which the heavy plank floor rested. From the enormous weight put upon the floor from time to time, the posts and pillars had settled irregularly, and more than the foundation wall of the building, with the result that the floor dished and sagged at all times towards the center, and more so when it was heavily loaded. There was no possible question about the security or safety of the floor. Wheeling a loaded truck over a large floor like this would necessarily cause the floor to vibrate or shake more or less. The evidence indicated that any floor of this size would be likewise affected,. [795]*795and I think it is common experience with all that such a result follows in any large room, like a dancing hall, a storehouse, a big piazza or other place where quick, sharp movements are made. Undoubtedly, the timbers in the cellar were rough, and the evidence indicates that new timbers had been put in from time to time, especially near the doors where the heaviest trucking was taking place. The evidence as to the roughness and the general appearance of the timbers in the basement was addressed really to the prejudice and not to the judgment of the jurors. Evidently, the roughness, the season cracks in the timbers and the condition described in the evidence as to the appearance of the floor when viewed from the basement, would be that ordinarily found in any building used for a similar purpose. We conclude, therefore, that there is no substantial change in the evidence upon which the recovery is based.

Upon the disputed points the evidence in favor of the plaintiff does not at all times seem to be the voluntary statement of a witness, but the plaintiff has forced words into the mouth of a witness under such pressure that the witness allowed them to escape. The defendant’s counsel and the court made an earnest effort to prevent the plaintiff from leading his witnesses, but plaintiff was so persistent and insidious that they were unable to control him. We find the examination of the witness Kirchner, apparently a fair, disinterested man, who was wheeling the truck which it is claimed caused the floor to vibrate, was unfair and prejudicial to the defendant. He was asked on his direct examination: Q. Did you ever see bags of cement or of any of the building materials stored in this storehouse fall down there between January 1, 1911, and February 16, 1911, when there was any trucking going on over the floor? A. Well, I don’t remember now. Q. Did you ever see bags of cement fall down there on the floor of the storehouse before this accident ? * * * A. No.” Plaintiff’s counsel then, for the purpose of refreshing the memory of the witness, as he said, asked the witness if upon the former trial he did not swear as follows: “ Q. Do you ever remember of seeing any bags of cement falling down there in the storehouse before Scharff was hurt ? * * * A. Yes, sir. Q. How long, about, before Scharff was hint, was that ?

[796]*796A. About two weeks.” This was .objected to as incompetent and improper and the objection overruled, with exception. The witness was then asked on this trial:. “ What is the answer to that? A. I said no, five years ago; I can’t remember all this stuff. Q. Do you remember so testifying on the last trial as I have read to you here just now? A. Yes, sir, I remember what you read there. Q. Was that so? [Objection as incompetent and improper, overruled and exception.] A.

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Related

Scharff v. . Jackson
111 N.E. 242 (New York Court of Appeals, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 A.D. 792, 168 N.Y.S. 311, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scharff-v-jackson-nyappdiv-1917.