Court Opinion

ID: 5543572
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 18:54:18.624519+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:34:52.352116
License: Public Domain

Larremore, G. J.
Counsel for respondent contends that there is no proof in the case tending to show that the employer had neglected to protect the side walls of the trench so that a cave-in could not occur. But in this he errs. Plaintiff testifies that “ there had not been any supports of any kind used to sustain the banks at the time.” The witness Daniel Doyle also says that “there were no timber or braces that I saw in that point. I mean that open space. ” This evidence must be considered, in connection with the fact that all of plaintiff’s expert witnesses concur in the opinion that in a trench of the general size and character here described, dug in made ground, some precautions in the way of bracings, or large girders, or careful sloping in the excavation, are necessary. It is true that said experts substantially agree in the belief that what amounts to reasonable care in any particular case must be determined by the peculiar facts of such ease, and that they do not express the absolute opinion that respondent had been negligent, because they had not examined the trench in question. Nevertheless plaintiff himself and his fellow-workmen described the trench in Eighty-Fifth street with sufficient particularity for the jury to apply thereto the general principles to be deduced from the evidence of the experts. It was alleged on behalf of plaintiff that defendant had caused to be excavated a deep and wide trench, with sides “almost perpendicular, ” and that he had omitted all artificial safeguards against a caving-in of the ground, which, moreover, was “made” ground. These facts, in conjunction with the testimony of said experts, made out a prima facie case of negligence on the part of the master.
Nor do we think contributory negligence is to be imputed to the appellant because he obeyed the foreman’s command, and went to work at the bottom of the trench, although he had the same opportunity of observing any appar*518ent insecurity which said foreman, or even the master, had. At the last general term of this court in the ease of McGrath v. Walsh, 4 N. Y. Supp. 705, we held, following the direct intimation of the court of appeals in Cahill v. Hilton, 106 N. Y. 512, 13 N. E. Rep. 339, that a workman of ordinary skill must be presumed to be acquainted with such a simple implement as a ladder, and that if he continued work on one, after he had discovered that the rounds would turn under his feet, he was guilty of contributory negligence, if injured in consequence of such defect. Here the case is quite different. Whether the banks of a deep trench will or will not cave in involves a question in civil engineering. A workman of ordinary intelligence cannot be required at his peril to solve a problem fitted only lor specially educated experts. When his master commands him to enter an excavation, and perform certain work there, he has a right to assume that the place, and all the existing and necessary conditions for the performance of such work, have been rendered safe. We think the views above expressed are directly within the spirit and reasoning of the decision in Pantzar v. Mining Co., 99 N. Y. 368, 2 N. E. Rep. 24, in which ease, as in the ease at bar, the defendant endeavored, without success, to escape all liability, on the ground that the command to enter the unsafe place emanated from a foreman, and not from the master in person. The judgment appealed from should be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event. All concur.