Case Name: Julia Beregszazi, as Administratrix, etc., of Joseph Beregszazi, Deceased, Appellant, v. Kreischer Brick Manufacturing Company, Respondent
Court: New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1910-10-07
Citations: 140 A.D. 155
Docket Number: 
Parties: Julia Beregszazi, as Administratrix, etc., of Joseph Beregszazi, Deceased, Appellant, v. Kreischer Brick Manufacturing Company, Respondent.
Judges: 
Reporter: Appellate Division Reports
Volume: 140
Pages: 155–159

Head Matter:
Julia Beregszazi, as Administratrix, etc., of Joseph Beregszazi, Deceased, Appellant, v. Kreischer Brick Manufacturing Company, Respondent.
Second Department,
October 7, 1910.
Master and servant — negligence — death from fall of earth — facts not justifying recovery.
Action against a master to recover damages for the death of a servant who while working in a pit was killed by a fall of earth from above. The defendant was charged with negligence in that the slope of the earth which fell was too steep. It appeared that similar slopes had been used for a long time without accident and the only testimony to the contrary was that of an expert witness who had made no personal examination. On all the evidence, held, that the complaint was properly dismissed.
Appeal by the plaintiff, Julia Beregszazi, as administratrix, etc., from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the defendant, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Richmond on the 8th day of October, 1909, upon the dismissal of the complaint by direction of the court at the close of plaintiff’s case on a trial at the Richmond Trial Term.
Isidor Weis [Frank Moss with him on the brief], for the appellant.
J. Harry Tiernan [L. W. Widdecombe with him on the brief], for the respondent.

Opinion:
Thomas, J.:
Decedent, defendant's servant, was, with others, digging clay in a pit, when the interior face of the bank fell and killed him and another. The pit was twelve feet square and eight feet deep, and had banks on the south and east sides respectively, distant three and six feet from the base of the slope, which extended back eighteen feet in height- to the land of another, owner. The defendant's superintendent, who alone gave any understandable statement, testified: " Q. Just describe how it fell out. ? A. When I came there it was sort of an oval, the sand seemed to slip right out of the center. It left the top of the bank intact; sort of a saucer shape fell out of the center and slid into the pit. During my time as foreman no bank ever slipped into a pit. There never was an accident like that while I was there."
The complaint was dismissed upon the ground that the cause of the accident was not shown. The bank was composed of sand, gravel and clay, and red dirt on the top. The clay in places is just below, sometimes above the surface, but in this instance it was eighteen feet below the surface. Heitman describes the process of excavation : " We strip all the top dirt off the surface until we get down to the body of the clay, aiid we slope the surface, the dirt down to a certain angle that we think is safe. I would say that this bank was sipped at the place where this pit was at an angle of about 35 degrees; something like that. That is the customary slope. This hole in which the accident happened was surrounded by a space of three feet level and then this bank went up from that; about 18 feet up in the air; on an angle of 35 degrees on two sides of the work." The superintendent denied knowledge of the cause of this slide. The learned trial justice suggests that it might be speculated that one of the men struck the bank with a pick. But by the superintendent's statement there was no pick there. Moreover, sand fell, and the men were digging clay from the bottom. The bank w-ould slip if undermined. The authority for this is the superintendent, who was on the ground about eleven o'clock before the discovery of the accident at about two p. m., inspecting the place and looking for, and not discovering, danger; but he adds, "There had never been anything dug from the face of that bank. There is nothing to dig from there. I am sure of that." So that conjecture may be eliminated. There is a competent cause stated by an expert witness, to wit, the too sharp slope of the bank and its insufficient support at the pit. This was one of a line of pits, one separated from another by a wall of clay three or four feet wide. The only evidence of water was given by the decedent's son, who, on the day before the accident, saw " some water come out of the hill in the pit. Just a little water." The superintendent testified that it was dry. This work required a sloping bank, and the plaintiff sought by questions addressed to experts, varied in form and substance, to show that it was insufficient. The objection's to the questions were usually sustained, or the answers stricken out. The witnesses did not testify from personal knowledge of the strata of earth, sand, gravel and clay, each demanding a different slope, and there was criticism of the hypothetical questions in that there were elements lacking, or assumed without evidence.
The essential question related to the stability of the bank under the conditions shown in the evidence. But Allison, who had been connected with the pits at Haverstraw, stated the practice there, and also that the opening of pits under the conditions shown in the evidence " would weaken the bank and cause it to give way and cave in." This and similar evidence was given on direct examination. On cross-examination and to the court 'he answered: " The Court: In that case would not the whole thing go in, the bank and the side of the pit and everything else go in ? The witness : It will naturally, yes. Q. If the weakening was caused by the digging the pit it would not be the side of the bank that would come out; the whole thing would come out, wouldn't it ? A. If it was weakening there, yes, sir, and the other will come right on over the top besides. I have seen it give way and fill a hole where the side of the hole did not give way at all. • To Mr. Tiernan: Q. How, Mr. Allison, assuming that this bank rested on a clay foundation, a fire-clay foundation, if yon please, and that the bank consisted of sand and gravel with a strata of clay with a base three feet from the top of the pit and reclining back at angle of about 35 degrees, would you say that such a situation as that would be dangerous to the men working in the pit? A. I would, yes, sir. It would be dangerous because you have weakened your base there by having taken 8 feet by 12 by 12 away from it. To Mr. Tiernan : Q. Assuming, Mr. Allison, that the base or the side of the pit three feet .from the base of this bank did hot give way at the time the bank gave way, can you say in what respect it would be dangerous to have a bank erected in that way % A. Why, a side isn't necessary to give way always. There' may be a crack there which is — Q. Now — Mr. Moss: Let him answer. A. (Continuing): They may give way. Yes, I have seen them give way different times when the side of the hole didn't cave in at all. Q. But your only reason for saying that the work wouldn't be safe is because you believe such an excavation would weaken the base of the bank, is that true ? A. I certainly do. Q. And that too beside the fact that the side of the excavation may not have given way at the time the bank did — you don't want to change your opinion % The Court: He has said so two or three times. Be-Direct Examination to Mr. Moss : Q. Counsel asked you in what respect it would be dangerous. Would there be any other respect in which it would be dangerous to have the hole so close to the bank ? A. Why, even if it didn't weaken it, if anything should happen above the top or anything else, at 3 feet distance it would be apt to fall in the hole, and in a hole as small as that he wouldn't have a chance to get away. The gravel and dirt from above would come down and fill that hole and cover him up. Be-Cross Examination to Mr. Tiernan: Q. You are of course assuming that this pit was 8 feet deep on all sides, aren't you \ A. Well, if it wasn't 8 foot it would be practically that way from what I would naturally suppose. I am practically assuming now that this pit was 8 feet deep on all sides. Of course you have got to allow for a man digging in there. Be-Direct Examination to Mr. Moss : Q. If there was some variation from the exact figure of 8 feet, would that change your answer as to the depth of the pit ? A. Well, it would be all according to the variation. I do not mean to say it is absolutely necessary that the pit should be 8 feet deep in every part of it for my answer to apply."
This evidence presents the plaintiff's position, and the question is whether it shows (1) that an improper slope caused the accident; (2) whether the use of such slope was negligent. The superintendent's testimony is that such a slide had not happened previously during his service, begun in 1906, and it may be questioned whether an established method of excavation productive of safety is not more reliable than the opinion of experts, unacquainted with the strata, and uninformed save through hypothetical questions necessarily .giving no familiarity with the soil, sand and clay, their quantity, nature and relation as imposed one upon another. Allison stated it would cause the bank to give way. This was a sweeping and universal statement, aiid, unless it declared an inevitable result, it did not prove the cause in this particular instance. But that such condition of slope does not even generally produce such result in the locality in question is shown by the history of this yard since 1906, where in continuous excavation the slope had not proved insufficient. Hence, if it be improbable that the witness is mistaken, yet the cause and result given by him are so exceptional in that particular place, that in the exercise of ordinary care the defendant was not required to provide a more extended slope or additional safeguard. There are accidents resulting from «methods on their face so negligent, or so thoroughly proven such, that absence of former accident is unmerited good fortune, but such culpability should not in the present case be predicated upon the mere evidence of experts, one or many, who have made no personal examination, much less analysis of the elements of the banks, as was done in Village of Haverstraw v. Eckerson (118 N. Y. Supp. 337), to which appellant refers, where it also appears, wherein there is a wide dissimilarity from the facts of this case, that previous slides had occurred. The appellant asserts that the pits should have been enlarged to permit the workmen to escape slides if they occurred. There was not occasion to make provision for avoiding slides not expectable, and in any case it would be a conjecture of no legal value that it would so come that in matter of time, place or forewarning the men could avoid it, however unconfined the limits of the pit. The contention that the defendant was negligent in its omission to have an overseer continuously present to guard against such accident falls in view of the stated conclusion.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Present — Hirschberg, P. J., Woodward, Burr, Thomas and Rich, JJ.
Judgment unapiroousJy affirmed, with costs.