The action was brought under the Labor Law. The appellant was the general contractor for the erection of a high building of steel construction, and the plaintiff’s intestate was a workman in its employ. For the use of itself and its subcontractors, indiscriminately, as them needs might require, defendant had installed a double hod hoist to hoist building material to the various floors. These hoists were bought from and installed by a responsible concern who made a specialty of such work, and were of a type in common use. Each hoist consisted of an open platform with a vertical post on either of those of its two sides which were at right angles to its front and back. At about the height of a man’s head these posts were connected by a crossbar, to which was attached the cable by which the hoist was raised and lowered. Each raise was open on all sides and wholly unprotected from objects falling from above. The hoists ran back to back in an open shaft which extended from the basement to the top of the building, and was intended ultimately for use as the elevator shaft of the completed building. The superficial area of the platforms of the two hoists was considerably less than that of the square of the shaft, so that the hoists did not “fit” the shaft, and there was a space of from eighteen to thirty inches between the exterior edges of three sides of each of the platforms and the corresponding sides of the shaft. The hoists were placed back to back, and between the two was a space of about eighteen inches. All of these open spaces were large enough to admit objects of considerable size, which, falling from above, might strike the unprotected platforms of the hoists if the latter happened to be at any point below.
On November 14, 1910, the deceased, while unloading material from one of these hoists at the third floor, a task to which he had been put by his superior, defendant’s foreman, Eyan, and while bending over, in the act of lifting a piece of material, was struck on the head by a brick which fell from above. *270There was evidence justifying a finding that objects frequently fell or were thrown down this shaft, and that to Eyan’s knowledge this condition had existed for some time before the day of the accident. In fact, the situation and surroundings of this open shaft were obviously such as to suggest danger from falling objects to any one working in the shaft or upon the hoists. It is to be inferred that appellant itself recognized the prudence of covering such of the open spaces as it was possible under the circumstances to protect, namely, the spaces between the front edge of each platform and the edges of the several floors, because some time prior to the accident the defendant had given instructions to that effect, which instructions had been obeyed so far as possible, but many of the planks used for the purpose had been taken away and used in building scaffolds. There was no direct evidence from whence came the brick which hit the deceased, or through what particular aperture or apertures it descended in the course of its fall, but at the time of the accident the other hoist was in use by the defendant to convey brick and cement to some of the upper floors, and was then at a point considerably above the hoist on which the deceased was working, from which fact alone the jury might have inferred that the brick fell from this other hoist.
Prior to the accident the deceased was in good health. From the blow caused by the brick he suffered a compound fracture' of the skull, for which a serious operation was performed, as the result of which a raw space was left exposing the brain. The wound was still open and discharging when he left the hospital, to which for a considerable time he was compelled to return daily for treatment. The wound continuing rebellious, shortly after January thirty-first, a further operation was performed, but the wound refused to heal. About the twentieth of March his sputum was examined and pulmonary tuberculosis was discovered, from which time the disease steadily progressed until the 28th of April, 1911, when the deceased died from pulmonary tuberculosis. One of the plaintiff’s physicians testified that at the second operation the condition of some of the bone tissue of the skull was such as to justify -the suspicion that tuberculosis then existed at that *271point. Taken as a whole, the plaintiff’s medical testimony was to the effect that the blow and the subsequent operation lowered the vitality of the deceased and decreased his powers of resistance so as to make him peculiarly susceptible to the tubercular germ, and that it was fairly to be inferred that the tuberculosis from which he died was the direct result of his injury.
A notice under section 201 of the Labor Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 31 [Laws of 1909, chap. 36], as amd. by Laws of 1910, chap. 352) was duly served on the plaintiff’s behalf. Defendant conceded such service and takes no exception to the form of the notice. A copy was attached to the complaint, and the objection now urged is that because the notice was not formally offered in evidence the action must fail. There is no force in this objection. (Holmes v. Jones, 121 N. Y. 461; Field v. Surpless, 83 App. Div. 268.) The defendant’s opportunity to attack the sufficiency of the notice was as open as if it had been formally offered in evidence, and a failure so to offer it in no way militated against any of defendant’s rights. The question whether death or injury from a secondary cause may or- may not be the proximate result of the wrongful act complained of has been so often and so fully examined (Sallie v. New York City R. Co., 110 App. Div. 665; McCahill v. N. Y. Transportation Co., 201 N. Y. 221) that no further discussion of the authorities is necessary. I deem the evidence on' this subject ample to sustain the verdict.
On the trial the defendant’s counsel urged that the measure of defendant’s duty was reasonable care, and that if the hoist qua hoist was sufficient, the defendant performed its whole obligation, and was not called upon to furnish a hoist so covered or protected as to offer any degree of security from risks arising from extraneous conditions. The view of the learned trial justice was that it was for the jury to say whether the hoist was such as, under all the circumstances, afforded the deceased reasonable protection from objects faffing from above and that the employer’s duty was not satisfied by the exercise of any degree of care less than that which offered such protection. I concur in this interpretation of the statute. The provisions of section 18* are very broad. “A person employing or direct*272ing another to perforin labor of any kind "x" "x" * shall not furnish or erect, or cause to be furnished or erected for the performance of such labor, scaffolding, hoists, * * * or other mechanical contrivances which are unsafe, unsuitable or improper, and which are not so constructed, placed and operated as to give proper protection to the life and limb of a person so employed or engaged. ” In connection with this must be read section 202 (as amd. by Laws of 1910, chap. 352), to the effect that the necessary risks assumed by the servant are only such as are “ inherent in the nature of the business, which remain after the employer has exercised due care ” and has complied with the law. Section 18 is part of a comprehensive scheme to improve the conditions under which labor is employed and to afford work men greater• security from injury. The object of the statute, a purpose which to my mind its words amply support, was not merely-to secure scaffolds, hoists and other “contrivances” which were in and of themselves safe and secure, but to enforce the furnishing by employers of implements or apparatus “so constructed, placed and operated as to giveproper protection ” under the particular conditions pertaining to their use. If they fail to come up to this standard, however excellent they may be in design, construction or material, they are “unsafe,” “unsuitable” and “improper,” and not what the law contemplates and enjoins. True, the hoist in question was not primarily intended to carry human beings, but it was necessary for workmen, for the deceased at least, to go upon it in the performance of his duty, and thus to subject himself to dangers which were naturally to be apprehended in view of the conditions under which the hoist was maintained. Failure to- so guard the hoist as to afford the deceased reasonable protection from such dangers was, to my mind, a failure to obey the statute. We are cited to no case exactly in point, but in several cases under section 200 of the act (as amd. by Laws of 1910, chap. 352) a similar construction has been given to “plant” “ways ” or “machinery,” the safety of which has been tested, not by their own intrinsic sufficiency alone, but as well with reference to the conditions under which they were used. (Sullivan v. Greenhut-Siegel, Cooper Co., 155 App. Div. 391; Lipstein v. Provident Loan Society, 154 id. 732.) A like interpretation has been given to. *273the term “ machinery,” as used in the English Employers’ Liability Act, 1880 (See 43 & 44 Vict. chap. 42, § 1, subd. 1; Heske v. Samuelson & Co., L. R. 12 Q. B. Div. 30, cited in the Sullivan case, which involved facts very similar to the present; also, Weblin v. Ballard, 17 id. 122.) The measure of defendant’s duty was not due care, for the statute cast upon the defendant the burden of compliance with its terms. As was said in Smith v. Variety Iron & Steel Works Co. (147 App. Div. 242, 244; affd., 208N. Y. 543), a scaffold case, if section 18 enjoins no more than reasonable care on the part of the master, there was no reason for its enactment, for such was the common law. To the same effect are Caddy v. Interborough Rapid Transit Co. (195 N. Y. 415); Armenti v. Brooklyn Union Gas Co. (157 App. Div. 276, 281, 282), and other cases. Whether, under the circumstances, the hoist was safe was a question for the jury. (Haggblad v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co., 117 App. Div. 838; Schmidt v. Rohn, 127 id. 220.)
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Scott and Dowling, JJ., concurred; Ingraham, P. J., and Clarice, J., dissented.
Since amd. by Laws of 1911, chap. 693.— [Rep.
Since amd. by Laws of 1911, chap. 693. — [Rep.