This action was brought -by the plaintiff, as administratrix, under the act of 1847, and its amendments, which give compensation in case of the death of a person occasioned “ by wrongful act, neglect or default.”
The defendants, a manufacturing company, were engaged in the distillation of coal-tar, and in the manufacture of oils, as benzole, benzine and naphtha.
The deceased, a son of the plaintiff, was a boiler-maker in the employ of a firm engaged in the construction and- 'reparation of boilers, and was sent by his employers to the defendants’ manufactory to repair their boiler. To prosecute the work, it was necessary to labor on the inner surface,by the light of lamps, entering through an orifice opened for the purpose.
On the day of the disaster, the deceased labored as he had done for several previous days, until twelve o’clock, then went
On the part of the defendants, it was maintained that the gas was generated in the boiler itself, by reason of the combustion of the lamp, and the respiration of the laborers therein ; and further, that, wherever it had its origin, the deceased himself contributed to the danger, and actually caused the catastrophe, by closing or directing the closing of the ventilator attached to the boiler, and which operated as a safety-valve for the escape of noxious gases.
There was no dispute but that there was such ventilator, and that safety to the laborers within the boiler required it to be generally, if not at all times, open while the work was progressing; nor is there any dispute but that the deceased, in the forenoon of the day of the disaster, directed and caused it to be closed.
In this view of the case, and, in my judgment, none other can fairly be taken, the learned judge should have nonsuited the plaintiff at the close of the evidence, as he was requested to do; for, on the conceded or undisputed facts, it stood established, that the deceased, by bis own careless, negligent and wrongful act, contributed to the cause which produced his death. It seems plain, beyond peradventure, that the closing of the ventilator prevented, in a very great degree, the escape and diffusion of the noxious vapor, and caused it to accumulate ; and its unusual collection and concentration, thus produced, was the immediate cause of the injury complained of.
But if it be admitted ■ that a case was made for the eon
These instructions were obviously erroneous. The mere» feet of an injury or death on the' premises of a party, in his
It was held in Holbrook v. Utica & Schenectady R. R. Co. (12 N. Y., 236), that when a passenger on a railroad is injured, the burden of proving that the injury was caused by the negligence of the company, or its servants, rests upon the party seeking to recover damages "therefor; and that the mere fact that a person is injured while riding in a railroad-car, does not impose upon the company the burden of disproving negligence. Judge Euggles properly remarks, the presumption arises from the cause of the injury, or from other circumstances attending it, and not from the injury itself. So, in the case under examination, if indeed it was a proper one for them, the jury should have been directed to examine into the cause of the death, with a view of determining the defendants’ liability, instead of starting with a presumption of wrong, from the fact that the deceased died, on the defendants’ premises. The charge of the judge was manifestly wrong in a very essential particular. It cast the burden of proof where it did not belong, and permitted the jury to hold the defendants to a liability not warranted by the facts on which it was supposed to rest.
■ The order of the general term, reversing the judgment and granting a new trial, was clearly right, and should be affirmed. The defendants are also entitled to judgment absolute in their favor, according to the stipulation.
Davies, Hunt, Scrugham, Parker and Grover concurred in the conclusion arrived at, on the last point discussed in the opinion.
Porter, J., was for reversal.
Wright, J., expressed no opinion.