Wagner v. New York, C. & St. L. R.

78 N.Y.S. 696
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 18, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 78 N.Y.S. 696 (Wagner v. New York, C. & St. L. R.) 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
Wagner v. New York, C. & St. L. R., 78 N.Y.S. 696 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

HISCOCK, J.

This action was brought to recover damages for the death of plaintiff's intestate, who was killed by being precipitated from defendant’s railroad track into a ravine thereunder while at work upon a derrick car belonging to defendant. The accident was caused through said car being toppled off the track by the weight of a stone which was.being raised. The trial justice permitted the jury to find that the defendant was guilty of negligence in not having a proper appliance upon the car for controlling the swing of the boom of the derrick by which the stone was being raised, and also in not promulgating rules for anchoring the car to the track, and thus preventing it from being tipped over. We think that there was no evidence which entitled plaintiff to have the first stated ground of negligence-submitted to the jury, and that the second one was not set forth in the complaint, and that, therefore, errors were committed, which require the reversal of the judgment.

There was very little dispute about the facts upon the trial of the case. Defendant at and for some time prior to the time of the accident owned and operated this derrick car. It consisted of a flat-bottomed car, in the center of which over the front trucks was erected the derrick proper. This derrick consisted in part of a perpendicular mast 12 feet high, properly supported and fastened to the car. To-this mast was attached a boom about 24 feet long, which could be revolved around the mast, the latter turning with it. Originally, the-swinging of the boom was regulated by two men, each working a rope, which operated upon it. If it was desired to swing the boom, one way, one of the men accomplished this by tightening or pulling; [698]*698upon his rope, and, if the other way, the other man did it by a similar process. Some time prior to the accident this method of controlling the movement and location of the boom was changed. Without going into all of the details of the later method, it was, in substance, as follows: A rope passed around a large wheel near the bottom of and fixed to the mast, and thence between and around a couple of revolving winches to another wheel or windlass in the shanty upon the derrick car, to be hereafter referred to; and one man, by operating this latter wheel or windlass, could so operate the. rope upon one or the other of the winches as to cause the boom to swing in either direction required. The revolution of the winches was secured from power furnished by the steam engine, which was used to raise and lower weights upon the derrick. This latter result was secured in the ordinary way by a rope passing over the boom of the derrick and carried” to a drum which was put in revolution by the power of the engine. There was a house or shanty upon the car, wherein was located, amongst other things, the guide wheel or windlass already referred to, and beyond this the engine which furnished power for the derrick. In this house also stood the men, respectively, who operated the wheel and the engine. The house had openings in the front, rear, and upon the sides. Upon each side of the forward part of the car was fastened a strong hook, and there was furnished by the defendant, and with the car, at and before the time of the accident, what was undisputably a proper and sufficient appliance for connecting this hook with the track or any other proper object, and thus anchoring or fastening down the car, and preventing it from tipping over when a weight was being raised by the derrick. These appliances, outside of the hooks, were in the cabin, where intestate was working at the time of the accident. Upon the trial no criticism was made upon that car, <pr any of these parts or appurtenant appliances except those for swinging the boom, above referred to, and possibly the capacity of the engine. The trial justice, however, charged as matter of law that thé latter was sufficient, and not in any way defective.

It had become necessary for defendant to have a new bridge over a deep gully upon the line of its road in Chautauqua county. This bridge had been put in by an independent bridge company, which, in the process of construction thereof, had used this derrick car for several days. After the bridge was completed, the defendant was engaged in picking up and removing various débris which had been left. For this purpose it employed this derrick car, which stood over the gully, and also another gondola car, into which was being loaded the timbers and stone to be carried away. One Cole, who was supervisor of bridges and buildings upon one division of defendant’s road, was in charge of the work. Under him was one Cameron, who seems to have been the immediate boss or foreman of the gang, and various other workmen, including plaintiff’s intestate. The latter was cranesman, and as such it was his duty to stand in the caboose upon the car above referred to, and, amongst other things, operate the wheel or windlass which guided the swing and location of the boom of the derrick. The proper operation of the boom required that the [699]*699outer end of it should be kept as near to the edge of the car as possible allowing the rope to play and the stone or timber to be raised, and that it should not be allowed unnecessarily to approach a position at right angles with the length of the car. The nearer it approached this latter position, the greater the strain upon the car and the tendency to tip it over. Some timbers and two heavy stones had been raised and deposited where desired, and at the time of the accident a third stone was being raised. There had been attached to the stone to be raised the derrick rope, and there was attached to the latter another independent rope, which was held by Cole, for the purpose of in some way controlling or relieving the strain upon the derrick; but his position was such that he could not by this latter rope prevent the boom from swinging toward a position at right angles with the car. Plaintiff’s intestate stood in the shanty, looking out upon the side towards the boom and the stone that was being raised. After the latter had been partially raised, the boom commenced to swing from a position near the side of the car to one at right angles with it. Cole called to intestate one or more times to stop the outward swinging of the boom, or to pull it back towards the car. At about this instant the engine stopped working, the boom was not checked, the car was toppled over, and the accident caused. It was' not possible for the man controlling its movements to swing the boom back and forth unless the winches over which the rope passed for controlling the boom were in motion, and these were not in motion unless the engine was operating. We do regard it, however, as almost conclusively established that the operator could, by his brake wheel or windlass, so tighten the rope in question as to hold the boom still, even though the engine was not operating and the winches not revolving. Plaintiff’s intestate had been in the employ of defendant and engaged in the work in question for some considerable time, and no claim is made that he was not familiar therewith, or with the appliances in use at the time of the accident, including those employed to regulate the swinging of the boom. No question was presented as to the sufficiency or competency of the employés at work with intestate.

There has been some confusion in the course of this action about the precise theory upon which defendant might be held liable.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Oklahoma Portland Cement Co. v. Brown
1914 OK 658 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1914)
De La Mar v. Herdeley
157 F. 547 (Second Circuit, 1907)
Blust v. Pacific Telephone Co.
84 P. 847 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 N.Y.S. 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-new-york-c-st-l-r-nyappdiv-1902.