Shaw v. Rothschild Realty Co.

164 A.D. 196, 149 N.Y.S. 678, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7759

This text of 164 A.D. 196 (Shaw v. Rothschild Realty 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
Shaw v. Rothschild Realty Co., 164 A.D. 196, 149 N.Y.S. 678, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7759 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

This is an action in behalf of an employee against his employer to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by negligence. The plaintiff charged both a failure of common-law and statutory duty.

The. plaintiff became eighteen years of age on the 25th of August, 1911, and in the fore part of the following month he entered the employ of the defendant at its sixteen-story loft building Nos. 79-83 Fifth avenue, borough of Manhattan, New Y ork. Plaintiff testified that he was hired at thirty-five dollars per month by one Reid, the assistant engineer in charge at the building, who showed him how to trim an arc light and introduced him to one Wilson, who had been performing the duties to which plaintiff was assigned, which consisted principally of cleaning the machinery around the elevators, and directed Wilson to instruct him with respect to his duties; that Wilson showed him how to sandpaper the copper discs which operated the controls of the elevators, and to remove the oil that was thrown out from the gears, and directed him to clean the machinery connected with the four elevators at the rear of the building, and told him that it was his duty to clean the cables of those elevators about once a month, and said that “at some time later he would show me the method used,” but that Wilson never showed him how to clean the cables; that in October, by direction of one Speth, who was an electrician in charge of the elevators of the building under Reid, he went to a building across the street, which was also owned by the defendant, to observe the manner in which one Turner, who was employed there, cleaned the elevators in that building, and that he worked with Turner and observed the manner in which the lat[198]*198ter cleaned the cables, which was by dipping waste in kerosene and holding it around the cables as they came off the drum and allowing them to run through it while the elevator was in motion; that after thus observing Turner he performed his regular duties for a couple of days and then determined to clean the cables of the elevators in the building in which he was employed, and for this purpose obtained a pail of kerosene from the engine room and proceeded to elevator No. 2 with a view to going on the roof; that he there met Reid, and in answer to an inquiry by the latter as to where he was going, said that he was “going up to clean the cables on No. 2 elevator,” to which Reid replied, “All right; ” that he then boarded the elevator and on the way up said to Conners, the operator, “ When you go down this time, Walter, go all the way down to the engine room; ” that he had never attempted to clean an elevator cable before, but that he was familiar with the elevators and had been accustomed to ride on them and to go to the top daily to empty the cans containing the oil thrown out from the gears; that he gave this direction to Conners with a view to cleaning the full length of the cables, but did not so state to Conners; that it was his duty also to look after and replace the carbon brushes used in the operation of the discs on the elevator, and this required bim to stop the elevator by pulling out a “ breaker,” which took the electrical current from the controller of the operator; that at the top of the elevator there was a little room with a metal floor, in which the drum was located; that this room was light, and the cables passed through slits in the floor to the drum and to a wheel or sheave; that one set of cables attached to the car passed around the drum and over the wheel or sheave situated in front of it, and then to the counterweights, and another passed from the car directly over another wheel or sheave to the counterweights; that the drum was about four feet in diameter and five feet long, and each wheel or' sheave was about three feet in diameter and about three feet from the drum diagonally up; that the wheel or sheave over which the cables passed directly from the car to the counterweights was fixed on its axle, but the other wheel or sheave slid from side to side on its axle as the cables wound over or unwound from the drum; that Conners fol[199]*199lowed his direction and first ran the elevator down to the bottom. of the shaft, and he cleaned the cables that were then passing directly from the counterweights over the wheel or sheave down to the elevator, and in so doing he took hold of them with the waste saturated with kerosene after they had passed over the wheel or sheave and were descending toward the floor; that he was obliged to take hold quite firmly for the reason that the cables had considerable velocity; that the car stopped several times, and each time he let go and saturated the waste with kerosene; that after cleaning those cables, he waited for the car to start to come up, and then he proceeded to clean the other set of cables which were unwinding from the drum upon the wheel or sheave, seizing them in his hands with the waste saturated with kerosene as before; that he took hold of those cables about fifteen or twenty inches from the drum, and after the car had come up eight or nine stories it stopped, and he took his hands off “and got a fresh supply of kerosene, and then after the cables had started in motion I applied my hands again, but all of a sudden I felt my hand going down, and before I realized what had happened, my fingers were crushed in between the cables and the drum, and I was pulled underneath the drum; ” that he thereby sustained the injuries for which he seeks to recover damages; that the accident was caused by the sudden reversal of the car from the upward to the downward motion; that he was looking at the cables when they reversed and tried to let go, but that the reversal was so sudden and quick that he was nót able to do so in time to avoid the injuries.

Wilson, who the plaintiff claims instructed him to clean the cables, did not testify, and Reid did not specifically controvert plaintiff’s testimony to the effect that he informed Reid that he was going up to clean the cables and that he replied, “Ail right; ” but the defendant gave evidence tending to show that the cables were never cleaned, and Reid testified that on one occasion he saw plaintiff attempting to clean cables and stopped him and warned him against attempting it again under pain of discharge. Turner, who was called as a witness by plaintiff, testified on cross-examination that on the occasion when plaintiff observed him he cleaned the cables by putting the waste [200]*200on them as they passed over the surface of the drum, and not as plaintiff testified.

A notice and a supplemental notice purporting to be under the Employers’ Liability Act (Consol. Laws, chap. 31 [Laws of 1909, chap. 36], art. 14, as amd. by Laws of 1910, chap. 352) served on the defendant were received in evidence before any testimony was offered. Counsel for defendant objected to the notices on the ground that they were insufficient, and on the further ground that on plaintiff’s opening the cause of action, if any, was at common law. Plaintiff alleged negligence on the part of the superintendent in ordering the car which was ascending to be suddenly reversed, and so charged in the notices under the Employers’ Liability Act; but no evidence was offered on plaintiff’s affirmative case tending to show that the superintendent gave any order with respect to the reversal of the direction of the car, or did any other negligent act. When the plaintiff rested the defendant moved to strike out the notices on the^ ground that no statutory cause of action was shown. The motion was denied and an exception was duly taken. I am of opinion that the motion should have been granted.

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Related

Knickerbocker v. General Railway Signal Co.
103 N.E. 765 (New York Court of Appeals, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 A.D. 196, 149 N.Y.S. 678, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-v-rothschild-realty-co-nyappdiv-1914.