Sweeney v. Paige

Dykman, J.

The defendants in this action were building a large dam for the city of Hew York in the town of Southeast, in Putnam county, and obtained the stone from a quarry about three quarters of a mile from the work. There was a railroad from the quarry to the foot of an incline, and the stone were transported upon cars to that point, and then the cars, as they were loaded at the quarry, were raised or drawn up the incline to the top by a sta*891tionary steam engine. At the summit there was a turntable upon which the cars were placed and turned so as to run upon another track, and be drawn by a mule for a short distance upon the level until they reached the top of another incline, down which they ran by force of gravitation to the place where they were to be used. There was a brake on each car, with a loop in the top of the staff through which a stick was run for a handle to be used in applying the brake. There was no fastener for the brake, and it was held tight or loose by the operator as he desired to regulate its movement. This last descent was about twelve rods in length and about four or five feet to the rod. It was the duty of the plaintiff to mount the car when it left the turntable, tighten the brake, and be ready to regulate the speed when it commenced the descent. The car upon which the plaintiff was injured came to-the turntable in the usual course of business, loaded with three stones weighing about one ton each. The stone near the brake was about four or five feet long and four feet high. As the car started down the descent the plaintiff was standing upon the car in front of the stone, holding the brake, when the car gave a jolt, and the stone moved forward, and struck the plaintiff, and threw him off, and he fell under the wheel, and was dragged or pushed along to the bottom of the hill, and received the injuries of which he complains in this action. There was no defect in the track or the car, and the movement of the stone upon the car was the cause of the injury. It is true the plaintiff said the rails had spread, and the expansion jarred the car. The cause was tried at the circuit, and at the close of the testimony on the part of the plaintiff the defendant moved for a nonsuit, which was granted, and the plaintiff excepted, and has now appealed from the judgment entered against him.

Before the defendants can be rendered liable for the injuries sustained by the plaintiff they must be convicted of personal negligence which contributed to the accident, and in the examination of the question they are entitled to the presumption in which the law indulges that they have performed their duty towards the plaintiff as their employe until the contrary is made to appear. It is well-settled law in this state, applicable to cases of this character, that a master is bound to exercise all reasonable care to provide a secure place and safe machinery and implements for the use of his servants, but experience has shown that when that duty has been performed with scrupulous care there often remain dangers incident to the nature of the employment which are beyond the reach of anticipation. In this case the cause of the injury is not obscure. It resulted from the insecure loading of the stone upon the car at the quarry, and that work was done by pérsons employed by the defendants, who were coservants with the plaintiff, and against whose negligence the defendants are not insurers. Besides this, if there was danger in the situation incident to the mode of carrying forward the work in which the defendants were engaged, they were all apparent, and as easily observed by the plaintiff as by the defendants, and he is equally chargeable with them with knowledge of such imperfections. A careful examination of the testimony fails to disclose any negligence on the part of the defendants. They were engaged in the erection of a large structure, requiring many appliances for the facilitation of the progress of the work, and among these were the railroad and ears and the stationary engine, all of which answered the purposes for which they were designed. The defendants were not required to furnish the best appliances for their workmen. They were contractors for the construction of a large dam, and their success depended upon economical devices for the advantageous prosecution of their work. They had the right to consult their own interest, and their duty to their workmen was discharged when they used reasonable diligence and care for their safety. The railroad was an easy means for the speedy transportation of stone from the quarry to the place where it was to be used, and it was a temporary track, easily *892shifted at the end to facilitate the deposit of stone and other material at the proper point. Neither the track nor the ears ever failed to endure the weight and strain to which they were subjected. They always answered their purposes, and even at the time of the accident nothing gave way, and the car was not derailed., Moreover, as we have already said substantially, the plaintiff and others saw the track, and could plainly discover any danger to which he was exposed from its insecurity, but there never was any complaint of its inadequacy, or of its dangerous condition, and that is a plain indication that no one supposed there was any danger in operating the car as the plaintiff used it. The following cases are deemed ample authority for what we have said: Marsh v. Chickering, 101 N. Y. 396, 5 N. E. Rep. 56; Cahill v. Hilton, 106 N. Y. 518, 13 N. E. Rep. 339; Byrnes v. Railroad Co., 113 N. Y. 254, 21 N. E. Rep. 50; Burke v. Witherbee, 98 N. Y. 564. Thus there are two reasons why the plaintiff cannot recover in this action: First, because his injury resulted from the carelessness of his fellow workmen in loading the stone upon the car; and, second, because the defendants- have not been guilty of negligence. The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.