Wingert v. Krakauer

76 A.D. 34, 78 N.Y.S. 664
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 76 A.D. 34 (Wingert v. Krakauer) 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
Wingert v. Krakauer, 76 A.D. 34, 78 N.Y.S. 664 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinions

Hatch, J.: .

The' plaintiff brings this action to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by him through the negligence of the defendants • in failing to erect a safe and suitable scaffold for use in and about the alteration of their factory building.

Defendants are piano manufacturers, and at the time of the accident, resulting in the injuries of which complaint is made, were engaged in-the removal of their plant and business from a building in One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street to a building in One Hundred and Thirty-second street where the injury was sustained.

Plaintiff was one of. the employees of the. defendants, had been employed as a porter and upon a planer used in defendants’ factory, and in connection with such' employment had become familiar with different kinds of wood, but. had little if any knowledge upon the strain-bearing capacity of wood used for supporting scaffolding and other structures. While the. removal of the defendants’, business was in progress, the plaintiff and another employee of. the defendants were sent to the new factory .with directions to erect a scaffold for -the purpose of placing therein supports for some heavy shafting and pulleys, and the shafting necessary for use in and about the business to be carried on. The plaintiff and his fellow-workman proceeded to comply with the directions given by the defendants, and erected a scaffold in the designated room in the factory building, from twelve .to thirteen feet in height.

The method adopted in its construction was the erection of five pairs of upright pieces, four by fpur, running from the floor to the rafters; overhead, and secured at both ends. These uprights were from four to five feet'apart and consisted of new wood: The dis[37]*37tance between the sets of uprights does not clearly appear. From front to rear cross pieces were nailed upon each pair of uprights, and cleats were nailed thereunder for the purposes of support, and the cross pieces were also nailed to the uprights. So far as appears, the cleating and nailing were their only supports. These cross pieces were boards seven-eighths of an inch in thickness and four and one-half inches in width. They were obtained from a quantity of old and refuse lumber which the defendants had purchased and placed in the new factory. Much of this stuff was painted upon one side and discolored and dirty on the other. Upon the painted side defects in the material could not be discovered. Whether it could be discovered through the dirt and discoloration upon the other side before use was made of it does not clearly appear.

The plaintiff testified that he examined this lumber before using it; that it looked sound and good, and he saw no knots in it. For a platform two thicknesses of boards were laid on the top of the cross pieces covering the entire width between the uprights. The plaintiff had never built or aided in building a scaffolding before this time, and was unfamiliar with the method necessary to secure a safe structure. In the process of preparing the room for the defendants’ business, it became necessary to place boards, firmly attached to the ceiling, and upon these boards iron hangers were placed, consisting of a hook-shaped" contrivance, in which were placed boxes upon and through which the shafting was to run. After the scaffolding was erected it was used for the purpose of attaching these hangers to the ceiling. After this was accomplished it became necessary to place in position the shafting and pulleys, weighing about 971 pounds. For this purpose six men were ordered to get upon the platform of the scaffold by the defendants’ foreman, and raise the same into position. The weight of these men ran from 150 to 200 pounds each. Before the men got upon the scaffold plaintiff asked the foreman if it was safe, and he replied, m substance, that the scaffolding was sufficiently strong for the purpose for which it was to be used. As the men started to raise the shafting it caused a jar, and two cross pieces, at about the center of the scaffolding, broke and fell to the floor, the shafting came down upon plaintiff’s foot and inflicted injuries which made it necessary to subsequently amputate the limb about four inches below the knee. [38]*38After the accident it was discovered that one of the. cross pieces had a knot in it, at the point of the break, extending through the wood. This board was painted upon one side and was dirty and discolored upon the other. The nails which held the two. cross pieces which broke remained in the uprights, but were pulled through the broken cross pieces at the ends. It does not appear that there was any defect in the other cross piece which broke.

Evidence was given tending to show that no braces were attached to the scaffolding except at the ends upon the uprights. There was no bracing or other support to the cross pieces except as above stated. Upon the trial a model was used, but it did not accompany the record upon this appeal. It appears from the evidence that this model was supplied with braces supporting the cross pieces, and a fair inference arose from all of the testimony given upon that subject that proper construction required that the cross pieces should have been supported by braces running to. the floor.

' It was the contention of the plaintiff upon the trial that section 18 of the Labor Law (Laws of 1897, chap. 415) covered the case, and that the rule therein laid down measured the duty and obligation of the defendants in the premises. The defendants contended that the Labor Law had no application for the reason that the prosecution of the work did hot involve the erection, repairing or altering of a house, building or structure, and, therefore, that the scaffold was hot brought within the terms of the statute.

At the close of the plaintiff’s case the defendants moved for a dismissal of the complaint upon the ground that there was no evidence showing negligence upon the part of the defendants, or evidence of the absence of contributory negligence on the. part of the plaintiff ; that as it appeared" that the plaintiff and another fellow-work-in an constructed the scaffolding and knew precisely how it was built, the plaintiff thereby assumed the risk of any'defect in the structure ; that as the defendants had furnished abundant material with which to properly construct the scaffolding, they discharged in full measure the duty which they oWed to the plaintiff. The cOtirt granted the motion and dismissed the complaint upon the ground that thei Labor Law had no application to the case, and, therefore, that the .plaintiff was either guilty of negligence in the construction of the scaffolding or assumed the risk of its sufficiency, and that in [39]*39any event the defendants were guilty of no negligence, or breach of obligation which they owed the plaintiff.

It is quite evident that if the Labor Law was not to be applied to the facts of this case it would fall within the principle laid down in Butler v. Townsend (126 N. Y. 105), and the determination of the trial court should, therefore, be sustained. If the Labor Law is to be applied, then it follows that the determination of the trial court must be reversed, for by its provisions a duty is enjoined upon the defendants to furnish a safe and suitable structure. Such duty they may not delegate to another and may, not shelter themselves from responsibility if in fact the structure be unsuitable and unsafe, unless such condition be known to the person complaining of an injury therefrom, in which case such person may be held to have assumed the risk.

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Bluebook (online)
76 A.D. 34, 78 N.Y.S. 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wingert-v-krakauer-nyappdiv-1902.