Court Opinion

ID: 5229864
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 16:53:44.945637+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:27:38.935831
License: Public Domain

Stapleton, J.:
The plaintiff, a laborer in the employ of the defendant, was set to work to help a tinsmith recover, with tin or corrugated iron, the roof of a shed on defendant’s property. The roof was made of lumber. A section of the roof was inadequate to bear the strain of plaintiff’s weight in addition to the materials which he was carrying, and it gave way. Plaintiff fell through to the ground and sustained injury.
The evidence tended to show that the lumber was decayed and that the decay was observable from the reverse side, within the shed. The tinsmith, who weighed about as much as the plaintiff, had with safety walked on the spot through which the plaintiff afterwards fell.
The defendant was obliged to use ordinary care and diligence in giving the plaintiff a reasonably safe place to work, and the plaintiff was entitled to believe that the defendant discharged that duty.
The defective condition was not apparent to ordinary observation from plaintiff’s point of view. It was discernible from within the shed by proper inspection on the part of one charged with the affirmative duty of ascertaining the condition before providing it for the use of a workman.
*491This is not a case where the prosecution of the work made the place and created the danger. The plaintiff was hot assigned to demolish or reconstruct the roof. He was engaged to aid in recovering it with tin or corrugated iron, and the place furnished in which to do the work was the roof itself. The place was presented to the plaintiff, not prepared by him. His work was not, generally, to aid in repairing a defective structure, but specially to recover an established roof which he could assume to be sound in the absence of a visible defect, the dangerous nature of which an ordinary laborer could comprehend.
We think it was within the province of the jury, upon the evidence appearing in the record, to attribute the injury to the sole negligence of the defendant. (McGuire v. Bell Telephone Co., 167 N. Y. 208, 210, 211; Kranz v. Long Island R. Co., 123 id. 1, 5. See Gates v. State, 128 N. Y. 221, 226.)
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Present—Jenks, P. J., Burr, Thomas, Stapleton and Putnam, JJ.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.