Quinn v. Staten Island Rapid Transit Railway Co.

Plaintiff was the captain of a coal barge. The barge was sent to defendant's dock at St. George, Staten Island, to be loaded. It was lying there over Sunday when the accident in question occurred. The dock is a large double-deck structure extending seven hundred and sixty feet from the shore line. It is forty-six *Page 495 feet wide from the outer end to a point inshore four hundred and thirty feet where it gradually narrows down to twenty-one feet. The upper part of the structure was used by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company. Coal trains came over it to deliver coal through chutes to barges moored below. The lower part is about eleven feet above the surface of the water at low tide. It sustains the upper part by means of a flooring and clusters of columns which are built upon twelve-inch timbers running across the pier at twelve-foot intervals and projecting eight inches above the floor. The lower part was also used by the railroad employees and by the deckhands, owners, captains, mates or any one on the barges to pass to and from the shore and their boats. One may walk from the outer end to the shore but where the pier narrowed a four-foot walkway was constructed on each side of an unguarded opening. In the evening while on his way from his barge to the shore in the dark for the purpose of attending church services, plaintiff fell into the opening down a distance of ten or twelve feet, and sustained injuries. No other convenient way to go ashore existed. He recovered a verdict in the trial court but the Appellate Division dismissed his complaint on the ground that the open hole concealed by the darkness was a danger which he was bound to avoid.

This was not a public pier, open to all persons, like a highway. It was a pier to which barges were invited to make fast in order to receive coal. Defendant was bound to keep it in reasonably safe condition for those employed in that business. (Swords v. Edgar, 59 N.Y. 28; Newall v. Bartlett,114 N.Y. 399, and cases cited on page 404.) In the darkness of the night the opening was a hidden peril. It is urged that plaintiff's business did not take him on the pier. If he was there merely for his own convenience, he was, as the Appellate Division has held, a bare licensee who cannot recover. (Vaughan v. Transit *Page 496 Dev. Co., 222 N.Y. 79.) If he was there by invitation or on lawful business of interest to both parties he was an invitee. Business brought him to the pier and, incidentally to his business, he went ashore thereon. Was he not impliedly invited to use the structure for lawful and accustomed purposes? If so, it cannot be said that he used the pier at his own risk and that defendant owed him no duty except to refrain from wantonly injuring him. Reasonable prudence and care measured by the circumstances of which defendant was aware would then be the test. (Heffron v. N.Y.C. H.R.R.R. Co., 223 N.Y. 473, 479.)

The Appellate Division in fixing upon plaintiff the status of a bare licensee perhaps did not visualize the lower part of the pier as shown by the plan and photographs. The opinion says that a labyrinth of columns covered the lower flooring and that the flooring was discontinued at a point about three hundred feet from the shore. A labyrinth is a place of winding passages. These columns were spaced at regular intervals. The flooring extended all the way to the shore, making walk-ways for the railroad employees which were intended to be used and were used by them as a means of passage. The jury might say from the nature of the construction that an invitation to the bargemen to use it for the purpose of going ashore could also be inferred.

The judgment appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.

HISCOCK, Ch. J., CARDOZO and ANDREWS, JJ., concur; CHASE, COLLIN and CUDDEBACK, JJ., dissent.

Judgment reversed, etc. *Page 497