Schoonmaker v. Pittsburgh Contracting Co.

176 A.D. 48, 161 N.Y.S. 186, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8201
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 20, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 176 A.D. 48 (Schoonmaker v. Pittsburgh Contracting Co.) 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
Schoonmaker v. Pittsburgh Contracting Co., 176 A.D. 48, 161 N.Y.S. 186, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8201 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Putnam, J.:

Plaintiff’s intestate met his death in shaft No. 11, a tunnel seventeen feet in height and fourteen feet wide, which defendant was driving in rock near One Hundred and Twenty-first street, in New York, for the new city aqueduct. The tunnel [50]*50ran north and south from the shaft entrance or drift. The excavation first takes out the upper part, leaving, somewhat above the intended floor, a bottom which is termed a “ bench.”

Along the west side of the tunnel were electric lighting wires running from the drift entrance up to the heading, and attached to the side about six or seven feet high from the bottom of the tunnel. Before exploding a blast these wires would be taken down and set back so as to be a safe distance away from the explosion. The wires were disconnected by removing the plugs from the sockets where they are joined on to the wires further back. All of these wires were intended to be insulated so as to permit of being touched without danger.

Along the eastern side of the tunnel ran another wire called the “shooting wire,” to carry the current to explode the blasts. To let the current into this wire it was necessary to use a switch kept in a locked box, of which the blaster or foreman alone had the key. No current, therefore, was sent into this shooting wire until the time for actual blasting, when the men were ordered back out of the shaft into the drift, or even above, to the surface.

•Compressed air for the drills was conveyed along this tunnel through a three or four-inch iron pipe running about two feet above the bottom of the tunnel. In a previous blast one hole had missed fire, and, therefore, had to be exploded before other drilling. The deceased was employed as a “drill runner” at this heading.

Plaintiff’s chief witness was Seay, a colored man, who was a fellow-workman with the intestate. An issue of fact arises between Seay’s account and that of Melanify, the defendant’s foreman. Seay was on the “ bench” some ways back from the heading; there he met deceased coming back. Seay testified that deceased told him, “You go back and stand by the lights and watch them while I go down and see about connecting up the hole,” meaning that Seay was to watch the connection of the lighting wires at their sockets to guard “that nobody touched the wires while he was down connecting up.” About five or six minutes after that Schoonmaker returned to where Seay was. Seay states that Melanify stood fifteen or twenty feet away on the edge of the drift where it [51]*51comes into the tunnel; that Melanify said to deceased: “ Hook her up and let her go.” Schoonmaker then stood on the compressed air pipe with his hands on the connections of the lighting wire, where three sockets hung down at different points. Schoonmaker asked Seay to hand him the other end of the wire, which Seay did, but it was the dead end. When he screwed this into the socket it lit up all along the line, but the blast did not go. He hollered back to Melanify and said: “I guess she is no good; she don’t go.” Melanify answered: "Take her out.”

It was in the act of unscrewing the plug from this socket that deceased yelled out and his arms were seen to be " crimped up. ” Seay ran forward' and pulled his body off this compressed air pipe. Even then Schoonmaker’s hand had not let go. He did not revive, but died in half an hour. Seay testified that he saw on the socket, from which he released deceased’s grasp, a bare place or break in the insulation about the size of a nickel five-cent piece.

Melanify admits that he told Schoonmaker to run the wires (the shooting wires) up to the missed hole, and had told him that then they would shoot; but states that he then went away, came to the drift, and went up to the top of the shaft (this seems strange at such a time), but had come down again when he heard deceased.’s cry, and went forward and found him being supported in the arms of Seay. Melanify denies all the conversation that Seay attributed to him. He also said he examined the sockets right afterward, and states they had no defect of insulation. He admitted that he had then been told that deceased had been shocked on a“ bare place ” on these sockets.

Defendant also gave evidence of contradictory statements by Seay shortly after the accident; that he then said nothing of what he since attributed to Melanify, and that, two days later,. Seay told one Woodbury, a driller in this shaft, that Schoonmaker was carrying a piece of steel which he let come in contact with the wires. Other inconsistent statements by Seay were given.

Appellant argues that with one set of wires specially used to explode the charges, and a different set for lighting, it is improbable that at this occasion the lighting wires would be [52]*52pressed into use for blasting. But this was not the ordinary firing where several blasts are simultaneously shot off. Here was but a single hole which had missed. It had to be blown out, otherwise it would leave a danger for the next shift. In possible haste, with the general tendency at times, to ignore prescribed precautions, we cannot say that this jury might not rightly credit Seay as against the foreman.

On the issue whether deceased was electrocuted through this contact, defendant urges that the death was from suffocation and not from shock, or, if shock did cause death, it was due to Schoonmaker’s diseased condition, by which death ensued from a light current of 220 volts, which to an ordinary man would have been without ill effects.

Here defendant had the medical testimony of Dr. Larkin and the expert opinion of Mr. Charles Z. Southard. Plaintiff had the testimony of Dr. Weston, the coroner’s physician, who performed the autopsy on deceased. He describes a mark or spot on the left hand in the softer flesh between the thumb and forefinger. It seared the skin in a dark brown color, but did not destroy the surface. On this issue of the spot, or bum, Dr. Weston is corroborated by the widow, the mother and brother-in-law of Schoonmaker. Dr. Weston testified to opening and examining the brain. But defendant’s expert physician, Larkin, denied that the autopsy reached the. brain. On these differences the jury could have found the facts that there were an external burn, and internal effects found upon dissection in the heart and lungs, which Dr. Weston observed.

Appellant further contends that from the indicia on the body and the current of but 220 volts, the verdict that deceased was electrocuted is against accepted physical facts. Various experiments are cited to show that a far higher voltage was received without harm by many subjects.

In a small volume on electrical injuries it is stated: "There is a wide variety of external and individual conditions that influence the extent of electrical injury; and there is an interdependence of circumstances that make tabulated results and records of accidents apparently inconsistent. At one time 110 volts are involved, and there is a fatal accident; at another 1500 or more, and recovery will ensue. Individual suscepti[53]*53bility is a large factor and the emotions play no inconsiderable role.” (Lauffler Electrical Injuries [N. Y. 1912], 12.)

After pointing out that there have been many cases of accidental electrocution “with no demonstrated burns” (p. 15), he refers to an instance of defective insulation of the socket of an ordinary incandescent lamp, that bears considerable analogy to this plight of Schoonmaker.

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Bluebook (online)
176 A.D. 48, 161 N.Y.S. 186, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoonmaker-v-pittsburgh-contracting-co-nyappdiv-1916.