Court Opinion

ID: 5191060
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 15:36:11.354179+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:26:54.818970
License: Public Domain

Woodward, J.:
This action was brought, under the provisions of section 1902 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to recover damages for the alleged killing of plaintiff s intestate. The complaint was dismissed, on. motion of the defendant, at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, on the-, grounds that no negligence was proven on the part of the defend*441ant and that there was no evidence of freedom from contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff’s intestate. Under these circumstances, the plaintiff is entitled, to the most favorable construction which might be put upon the evidence by a jury; but even in this light we find no ground for reversal of the judgment. The evidence establishes that the plaintiff’s intestate had been employe'd as á man-of-all-worlc about the power house of the defendant for a period of several months; that on the 14th day of March, 1898, he was called upon to take the place of one Samuel Drake, who had been employed for several years in operating, or in assisting to operate, a coal conveyor or filler, and that on the fifteenth day of March, after having filled this position for eight or ten hours, he .was caught in the endless chain of the conveyor and drawn under a filler, receiving the injuries which resulted in his death. No one saw the accident, and there is an absolute absence of evidence as to the manner in which the deceased met with the casualty. There was some evidence that the endless chain, which carried a number of buckets, used to elevate the coal which was dropped into them from a filler as the buckets came along, had been deprived of two of its buckets, and that where the chain came up through the floor there was a larger space between the floor and the chain than would be there if the buckets were in place, but there is no evidence that this was the proximate, or even the remote, cause of the accident, and the same may be said of. the evidence that the hole, some twenty or more inches square, was unguarded. It is not enough to show that an employer has neglected to do something which he ought as a prudent man to do; it must be shown that the injury resulted from the neglect of a duty which he owed to the plaintiff’s intestate, and in the absence of such evidence the plaintiff has failed to prove her cause of action.
The case is equally devoid of evidence of lack of contributory negligence. While the courts of this State are disposed to accept very slight evidence where the injuries have resulted in death and the circumstances are such that direct evidence is impossible, we know of no instance in which a recovery has been permitted where there were no facts or circumstances from which a jury might reasonably draw the inference that the deceased had exercised reasonable care. All that is known in this case, so far as the evidence *442discloses, is that plaintiff’s intestate was killed about eleven-o’clock in the forenoon of March 15, 1898, while engaged in filling the position made temporarily vacant by the illness of Mr. Drake. There is no evidence that the deceased was not familiar with the place and with the work; no evidence that he was not instructed in his duties and warned of the danger to be anticipated, and, in fact no ground on which the defendant may be held to.he liable for the injuries.sustained by plaintiff’s intestate.
We think, however, that this was not intended by the learned court at Trial Term to be a dismissal “ upon the merits,” as stated in the judgment, and that the judgment should be modified by striking out those words, and as modified affirmed.
All concurred.
Judgment modified in accordance with the opinion of Woodward, J., and as modified affirmed, without costs. *