Court Opinion

ID: 6130347
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-04 21:01:56.10656+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:53:22.226605
License: Public Domain

Smith, P. J.:
Tbe complaint is for negligently causing tbe death of tbe plaintiff’s intestate, Peter Scbwandner, wbo' was an employe of tbe *187■defendants in tbeir wall-paper factory in tbe city of Buffalo, at tbe corner of Perry and Indiana streets. Tbe factory was destroyed by fire on the 17th of December, 1880, and tbe intestate lost bis life in tbe flames. * Tbe evidence tended to show tbe following state of facts ; Tbe factory was a brick building, five stories in height, and workmen were employed on each floor. The deceased was nineteen years old, healthy, worked every day, lived with bis parents and contributed bis earnings to tbeir support. He bad no stationary place of employment in tbe factory; bis business was on every floor, and in every part of tbe building, carrying away'scraps of paper. Tbe fire broke out just before six o’clock in the afternoon. About half an hour before tbe fire broke out, the intestate was seen ■on tbe fifth floor and was not seen alive by any oí the witnesses afterwards. Tbe testimony would have warranted tbe jury in finding that tbe intestate was on tbe fifth floor when tbe fire broke out, and that be there perished.
Tbe alleged negligence of tbe defendants consisted in not providing sufficient means of escape from tbe fifth floor in case of fire, ■and particularly in not furnishing a stair-case or ladder, or other means of access to tbe scuttle in tbe flat roof, which was immediately over- tbe fifth floor and about eleven feet above it. Tbe fifth story was divided into two rooms by a partition, in which were open spaces through which tbe workmen could pass. In each room was. an elevator, which, however, was not used as a means of passage for tbe workmen. In tbe room fronting on Perry street was a staircase, descending to tbe fourth floor, and from that floor two staircases led to the ground floor. In tbe rear room was an iron door •opening on to tbe flat roof of an adjoining building, known as Tifft’s pattern shop, but egress by that door was impeded somewhat by iron cog-wheels piled against it. Tbe fifth story was used as á drying room, and was kept at a temperature of about 100 degrees, and in it was suspended a large quantity of dried and drying paper. 'When tbe fire broke out thei e were about twelve boys at work in each room on tbe fifth floor. Tbe fire first broke through tbe fifth floor :about four or five feet south of tbe scuttle. It communicated instantly with tbe banging paper and spread so rapidly that it almost immediately cut off those in front from access to tbe back room, tbe ■stairs and tbe iron door. Of those in tbe front room, one only *188escaped through the iron door and one went down the stairs. All the others who were in the front room were lost. All who got upon the roof of Tifft’s shop were saved, and none were lost who were on any other floor than the fifth. An ordinance of the city* authorized by the charter (Laws 1870, p. 1180, ch. 519, § 8, sub. 4), requires that “ every building more than one story in height, in the city, should have a scuttle through the roof and a convenient and suitable .stairway or ladder leading to the same.”
"We are of the opinion that the evidence required the submission to the jury of the question whether the omission to provide a suitr able and convenient means of access to the scuttle was negligence on the part of the defendants, and Avhether such omission, if negligent, caused the death of the intestate.
The respondents’ counsel suggests that the ordinance referred to-was intended rather to provide for firemen a means of access to the roof than a means of escape to those within the building in case of fire. However that may be, we think that independently of the ordinance, the question was presented whether, in view of all the circumstances shown by the evidence, the defendants had used due care in providing suitable means of escape for their employes in case of fire.
It is also suggested that the evidence shows affirmatively that if there had been a stairway or ladder leading to the scuttle the intestate could not have escaped that way by reason of the fact that the fire was immediately communicated to the paper hanging underneath the scuttle. Hut in that case it would have been for the jury to say whether the respondents were not required, in the exercise of due care, to so place the drying paper as to leave the passage to the scuttle accessible in case of fire, and whether their omission to do so was negligent.
It is contended by the respondents that the deceased entered the-employment of the defendants with full knowledge of the condition of the building, and he must therefore be presumed to have taken-the risks arising from such condition, and for that reason cannot recover. Doubtless the general rule is that the employe loses the right of action when he voluntarily and unnecessarily puts himself in a place of danger. (Whart.. on Neg., § 215.) So, too, it has been held that if a servant accepts service with knowledge of the *189character and position of structures from wbicb employes might be liable to receive injuries, he cannot call upon the master to male alterations, or in case of injury hold him liable. (Gibson v. Erie R. R. Co., 63 N. Y., 449; Owen v. N. Y. C. R. R. Co., 1 Lans., 108.) But those rules apply only to the natural and ordinary risks incident to the work in which the servant engages, and the perils which in legal contemplation are presumed to be adjusted in the stipulated compensation. The fact that the intestate knew that there was no staircase or ladder leading to the scuttle was not, under the circumstances and as matter of law, conclusive evidence of want of due care on his part. As was said by Mr. Justice Byles, in Clarke v. Holmes (7 Hurlst. & Nor., 937), “ a servant knowing the facts may be utterly ignorant of the risks. ” It was held in Coombs v. New Bedford Cordage Company (102 Mass., 572) that “the fact that very near where a workman is voluntarily employed in a manufactory, machinery not connected with his work is in motion, the dangerous nature of which is visible and constant, is not conclusive that he has taken on himself the risk of being injured by it, in modification of the implied contract of his employer to provide for him a reasonably safe place in which to do his work; and if through inattention to the danger he meets with such an injury while doing his work and sues his employer therefor, the questions whether he met with it with due care on his own part, and by reason of the neglect of Ms employer to give him suitable notice of the danger, are for the jury.”
In this case the danger from which the injury to the intestate resulted was not a natural and ordinary risk incident to the work in which he engaged. His employment did not require him to be at all times on the fifth floor, but it took him into all parts of the building. Assuming that he was in the fifth story when the fire broke out, the fact that he was there at that time was, in a measure, accidental. Nor can it be presumed, as matter of law, that this lad, nineteen years old, when he entered the employment of the defendants, took into consideration the risk of the fatal disaster that after-wards befell him, and that his compensation was measured accordingly. We think that under the circumstances the question whether the intestate took the risk of the danger referred to was one of fact to be decided by the jury.
The respondents’ counsel contends that as the burden is on the *190plaintiff of showing that there was no want of due care on the part of the deceased, and there is no proof of the circumstances immedidtely attending his death, the plaintiff was properly nonsuited. Upon the assumption that the deceased was in the front part of the fifth story when the fire broke out, the proof in the case justifies the inference that he came to his death by reason of the fact that hé had no way. of escape, and not from any want of care on his part. In Johnson v. The Hudson River Railroad Company (20 N. Y., 65), which was an action for negligently causing the death of plaintiff’s intestate, where there was no witness of the occurrence, it was held that the absence of fault on the part of the deceased may be inferred from the circumstanqes in connection with the ordinary habits, conduct and 'm'otives of men; that the character of the defendant’s negligence may be such as pri/ma facie to prove the whole issue, and the known indisposition of men needlessly to expose themselves to difficulty -and danger is to be considered in determining the question. The same doctrine is recognized in many later cases, among which are Morrison v. The New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company (63 N. Y., 643); Willy v. Mulledy (78 id., 310); Hart v. Hudson River Bridge Company (80 id., 622); Mahony v. City of Buffalo (decided by this court in December, 1881, and not reported; S. C., affirmed, 91 N. Y., 657), and Cassidy v. Angell (12 R. I., 447). The question is not free from doubt, but on the whole we are of the opinion that the case should have been submitted to the jury.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide event.
Hardin, J., concurred; Barker, J., not voting.
So ordered.