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Sweeney v. Vacuum Oil Company

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Fourth Department
Mar 1, 1896
3 App. Div. 615 (N.Y. App. Div. 1896)

Opinion

March Term, 1896.


Motion denied, with costs. Held, that the negligence in this case, if any, was that of a co-employee, and, therefore, the nonsuit was properly granted. All concurred, except Ward, J., dissenting, and Green, J., not sitting.


This action was brought to recover damages for personal injuries received by the plaintiff at the oil refining works of the defendant at Olean, N.Y., on the 21st day of June, 1892, caused by the alleged negligence of the defendant. The defendant was a corporation and was engaged in refining and manufacturing the products of petroleum oil at Olean, N.Y. The plaintiff entered into the defendant's employ in March, 1892, and his business in the refinery was to press the oil from wax which is produced from crude oil by means of presses for that purpose. The presses were in a room in the refinery. Underneath the presses were two tanks for the reception of the oil that was forced out of the wax. It became necessary in the course of the business for the defendant to place a third tank below the presses for the reception of all the oil that they created, for which purpose the excavation in which the tanks were located in the ground under the floor of the refinery was enlarged by the direction of the defendant and a new tank was placed between the old ones; for this purpose the old tanks had to be crowded apart. This work had been going on for several days prior to the accident to the plaintiff. The plaintiff had been taken from his ordinary work of pressing the oil from the wax by George W. Hooker, the defendant's superintendent at the factory, and put upon the work of excavation and of putting in this new tank. After the excavation had been completed tackle blocks were rigged up to move one of the old tanks. They were put up through the ceiling of the room above the tanks some ten feet above the floor and a rope or chain was attached to them and to the tank, so that by pulling upon the rope passing through the tackle blocks the tank could be slid along to make room for the new one that was put in its place. The ropes passing through the tackle blocks got entangled in some way and the superintendent got a piece of iron pipe about nine feet long and two inches in diameter which he placed between the ropes and by twisting it tried to disentangle them. From some reason it did not work satisfactorily, and the superintendent, leaving this iron in this position, directed the plaintiff to go up on a ladder to untwist the rope or chain, which the plaintiff did. The plaintiff then descended and the superintendent called to plaintiff, "Come on here, come on here, Sweeney! Pull on this rope, slack on this rope!" This the plaintiff did, and just as soon as he did so the iron came down and hit him on the head. The plaintiff did not see the iron when he was up on the ladder nor did he see it when it came down. The iron hit the plaintiff upon the head, knocked him down and rendered him insensible and inflicted a serious injury upon him. The answer of the defendant admitted, and it was conceded upon the trial, that the said George W. Hooker was employed as its superintendent during all the time that the plaintiff was in its employment and that the defendant gave him (the said superintendent) full charge, control and direction of all its affairs in and about its business in Olean, which said Hooker assumed and discharged during all the time the plaintiff was in its employment. In the transaction, therefore, out of which this action grew, Hooker was the vice-principal or alter ego of the defendant. Had the defendant been an individual and been present and personally directed the work and the plaintiff, as was done by this superintendent, no question would arise but what he was guilty of negligence, or at least there was a question of his negligence to go to the jury. This corporation could not personally be present except through its officers and agents. The acts of Hooker were the acts of the corporation defendant. The plaintiff was not engaged in his ordinary work of extracting the oil from the wax. The defendant was enlarging its place of business, adding a new structure in the press room so as to increase the capacity of that room for storing the oil that should be pressed from the wax thereafter; it was in a measure a matter of original construction; a matter that falls primarily within the duties of a master. All that was done by the defendant was necessary in carrying out the purpose of the defendant as above indicated, and each step that was taken by the plaintiff in this business, including the final act which precipitated upon his head the iron that had been placed among the ropes by the superintendent himself in carrying on the defendant's business then in hand, was done through the positive command of the master through its superintendent. No further statement would seem to be necessary to show that a proper case was presented to the jury as to the negligence of the defendant and to whether the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. The defendant, however, takes the position that the acts of the superintendent above detailed were not those of the master (the defendant), but of a fellow-servant of the plaintiff in carrying on the detail of the defendant's business. So that at that time the superintendent occupied the dual relation both as master and servant, representing the master in all matters that it concerned the master to do, and being a servant of the master and a fellow-servant with the plaintiff in such matters as the plaintiff was ordinarily engaged in his work in that refinery, and the defendant relies upon Crispin v. Babbitt ( 81 N.Y. 516) and Cullen v. Norton (126 id. 1) to sustain that position. An examination of these cases will disclose such a different state of facts from the one at bar as will leave them of no value as authority here. In Crispin v. Babbitt the plaintiff was engaged as a workman at the iron works of the defendant at Whitesborough, N.Y., and by the order of John L. Babbitt, who was called the financial agent, superintendent, overseer or manager for the defendant, the plaintiff had assisted to draw a boat into a dry dock connected with the works; after the boat was in the dry docks, it became necessary to pump out the water; this was done by means of a pump, worked by an engine. While plaintiff, engaged with others, was engaged in lifting the fly wheel of the engine off its center said John L. Babbitt carelessly let the steam on, starting the wheel, throwing the plaintiff on the gearing of the wheel and injuring him. It was held that Babbitt in doing this act, which was a part of the detail of the ordinary work of getting the boat into the dry dock and pumping out the water so that it could be repaired, was the fellow-servant of the plaintiff and not engaged in any act in which he represented the master. This was held by a divided court, Judges Earl, Danforth and Finch dissenting. Judge Earl wrote a remarkably strong and clear dissenting opinion, in which he says at page 526: "I have made a thorough examination of the reported cases in this country and in England, and I think I may safely affirm that there is no case in which the question was involved where this dual relation has been recognized and the rule thus laid down. The rule is thus stated in Wood's Master Servant (§§ 438, 451, 453), and there is a dictum to the same effect by Judge Potter in Brickner v. The N.Y.C.R.R. Co (2 Lans. 506-516). The only case I have been able to find in which the precise point was involved and decided is that of Berea Stone Co. v. Kraft ( 31 Ohio St. 287). In that case Kraft was a laborer in a stone quarry of the company and one Stone was then agent of the company and foreman of its quarry. Stone carelessly and improperly fastened certain hooks to a soft stone for the purpose of raising it with a derrick, about which Kraft was also engaged. The court was asked to charge that if the injury happened by the negligence of the defendant's foreman when he was doing the work of a co-laborer with the plaintiff, and not when in the discharge of his duties as foreman and representative of the defendant, the plaintiff cannot recover unless the plaintiff shows that the defendant did not exercise reasonable care and prudence in the selection of a foreman. This request was refused, and Boynton, J., writing the opinion of the court, said: `The fact, if it be true, that Stone's negligence in assisting in fastening the hook to the stone to be raised may have caused the injury, and that he was then performing the duty of a common workman and not those strictly pertaining to the duties of foreman, in no wise relieves the company from liability. If the act done by him had been done under his direction, as he did it by one of the employees of the company, its liability could not be doubted, and for the reason that the negligent act, although committed by the hand of another, was in law the act of the foreman, and consequently the act of the master, and it could be no less the act of the master when performed by the foreman in person.'" I feel justified in this extended quotation from this dissenting opinion because of its historical importance in connection with this question, and its reference to the then only reported decision in this country within the research of Judge Earl that had asserted any such doctrine, and also to justify the view that Crispin v. Babbitt should not be followed further than the facts in that case absolutely warrant. In Cullen v. Norton (above cited), where the decedent was employed as a laborer in a quarry and was engaged in drilling rock for blasting purposes under the direction of the defendant's foreman, and after it was found that a blast in one of the holes had not exploded, the foreman examined it and found the fuse unconsumed, but failed to remove it, and set another workman to drilling within two feet and directed the decedent to drill at a place some twenty or thirty feet distant, and the fuse caught fire and the charge in the hole exploded, causing the death of the decedent. It was held that the foreman in this work was a fellow-servant of the deceased. It will be seen that in the case of Cullen v. Norton it was only a foreman of the work whose act caused the death, not a general superintendent or vice-principal of the defendant. In Hankins v. The N.Y., L.E. W.R.R. Co. ( 142 N.Y. 416) plaintiff, who was a fireman on one of the defendant's freight trains, was injured by a collision with another train. Both trains were behind schedule time and their movements were controlled by special telegraphic orders from one of the defendant's train dispatchers, and the accident was caused by the negligence of one of the train dispatchers in giving those orders. It was held that the defendant was liable, the court holding that the act of this train dispatcher was the act of the defendant and not the act of a fellow-servant of the plaintiff, although the dispatcher and the plaintiff were engaged as the servants of the defendants in the same general business of operating the defendant's railroad, and it was strenuously contended by the defendant in that case, as the General Term of the fifth department had held, from which the appeal had been taken, that the train dispatcher was the fellow-servant of the plaintiff and thus the defendant was not liable Shearman on Negligence (§ 102) states: "One to whom his employer commits the entire charge of the business, with power to choose his own assistants and to control and discharge them as freely and fully as the principal himself could, is not a fellow-servant with those who are employed under him; and the master is answerable to all the under servants for the negligence of such managing assistant, either in his personal conduct within the scope of his employment or in his selection of other servants." In Pantzar v. Tilly Foster Iron Mining Co. ( 99 N.Y. 368) defendant was the owner of a coal mine in Putnam county, N.Y., conducted under the management of a superintendent who was invested with the same powers as the superintendent in the case at bar. An accident occurred to the plaintiff, who was an employee of the defendant, while working in a pit of the mine upon a wall in the course of construction for the purpose, viz.: To furnish a place behind which to deposit the refuse material of the mine, was injured by the fall of a mass of rock from an overhanging cliff. The negligence claimed was that the attention of the superintendent had been called to a crack in the wall back of the cliff, and that the superintendent had taken no precaution, though it was practicable to do so, to support the rock and to prevent the falling of the rock from the cliff. Held, that this negligence of the superintendent was that of the master, and that the master was bound to furnish the plaintiff with a safe place to work, which had not been done in this instance. In McGovern, administratrix, v. The Central Vermont R.R. Company ( 123 N.Y. 280) it appeared that the defendant operated in connection with its railroad a grain elevator which was under the entire control of a superintendent appointed by it. The superintendent ascertained that the grain had not been entirely discharged from one of the bins of the elevator, and that the grain was heated, and he knew that when heated it was liable to stick together and adhere to the sides of the bin; also, that when detached it would fall into the bottom of the bin and jeopardize the life of any one who might be there. He sent McGovern, the deceased, a laborer employed by the defendant, to shovel grain into the bin through a trap door at the bottom thereof, which had been constructed to allow workmen to enter for the purpose of clearing out the bin, having opened the door himself and placed the ladder in position. The bin might have been examined from the top to ascertain the amount of grain in it and its location, but the superintendent omitted to do this; after McGovern had entered the bin the grain fell and buried him, causing his death. Plaintiff was nonsuited. Held, error; that the superintendent stood in the place of the defendant with respect to its servants, and that whether the defendant discharged the duty it owed the plaintiff's intestate was a question of fact to be determined by the jury, as was also the question as to the contributory negligence on the part of McGovern. The case at bar is stronger for the plaintiff than the one just cited for the reason that in the case cited the servant and the superintendent were engaged in the detail of the business of the defendant at such elevator, and not in the work of constructing or repairing a place to carry on the defendant's business. It is certainly a strong case to sustain the plaintiff's contention here and received the sanction of the Court of Appeals long after the dual doctrine in Crispin v. Babbitt had been announced. In Benzing v. Steinway Sons ( 101 N.Y. 547) plaintiff, an employee in the defendants' factory, was called from his work to assist in putting up girders to support a roof in another part of a factory; this was not in the line of his general duty, and he had no previous knowledge of the applicances used in the prosecution of the work. He was ordered by the foreman to get upon a platform which was defective and broke. The plaintiff was injured and brought an action to recover damages therefor. The complaint was dismissed on the ground that the negligence, if any, was that of a co-servant for which the master is not liable. This was held to be error for which the judgment was reversed. In McCampbell v. Cunard Steamship Company (69 Hun, 131; 23 N.Y. Supp. 447) the plaintiff was ordered by the defendant's superintendent to truck a load from the deck of a steamer to the dock over a skid at a steep angle. The skid was furnished with mouth pieces at each end, so as to follow the swaying of the ship. On starting down the skid, drawing a truck after him, the load on the truck began to move owing to insufficient means furnished to keep the load stationary, and the plaintiff was injured. Held, in that case, that the superintendent was not a fellow-servant of the plaintiff. In Hardy v. Minneapolis St. Louis Railroad Company (36 Fed. Rep. 657) defendant's yardmaster mounted the switch engine, and while acting as engineer directed deceased to assist in uncoupling cars; the latter while doing so was killed. Held, that the court properly refused an instruction that while the yardmaster was acting as engineer he was a fellow-servant of the deceased, and defendant would not be liable for his acts as such. Though actually engaged as engineer, he was none the less yardmaster and entitled to be obeyed in the work of making up the train. Where authority is conferred on a servant by the master over his fellow-servants and his negligence causes an injury to one of them, the master is not exempt from liability under the rule relating to the negligence of fellow-servants. ( Chicago Dredging Dock Co. v. McMahen, 30 Ill. App. 358.) The fact that the superintendent, after having negligently directed the work, assisted in its performance does not affect the question of the master's liability. ( Malcolm v. Fuller, [Mass.] 25 N.E. Rep. 83) The foreman or boss of a gang and hand car who furnishes one of the hands with a defective lever wherewith to propel the car and places him in a dangerous place to operate it, is pro hac vice the employer whom he represents, and his knowledge of the condition of the premises is to be attributed to his employer, who will be liable to the servant for injuries resulting therefrom. ( Banks v. Wabash Railway Co., 40 Mo. App. 458.) In an action for personal injuries, the evidence showed that the plaintiff was sixteen years old, and while working in defendant's machine shop, he was sent to assist in making a wrench. The foreman, knowing the plaintiff's minority and lack of strength, directed him to reach under a heavy trip hammer operated by a treadle and seize with a pair of tongs a piece of iron. The iron was too heavy for the plaintiff to handle and the tongs fell from his hands and fell upon the treadle, thus precipitating the trip hammer on plaintiff's hand and injuring it. Held, that the defendant could not exculpate itself by claiming that the man who directed the plaintiff while at work was a fellow-servant. ( Yeaman v. Noblesville Foundry Machine Co., [Ind. App.] 30 N.E. Rep. 10; Gagnon v. Seaconnet Mills [Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts], 43 id. 82.) The head note in that case is as follows: "In an action by a servant for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligent manner in which a timber was loaded on the carriage on which it was hauled, it appeared that the timber was loaded by pushing it on over a roller at the rear of the carriage, and that after it was loaded the roller was left under the timber. Defendant's superintendent directed plaintiff to sit upon the timber to prevent it from tipping. Plaintiff was injured by reason of the beams canting over on account of the wheels of the carriage dropping into a rut. Held, that the question whether defendant was negligent in loading the timbers and in directing plaintiff to get upon it was for the jury." In Geloneck v. Dean Steam Pump Co. (43 N.E. Rep. 85): "Where there was evidence that plaintiff was directed by his foreman to assist in moving certain machinery, and such foreman assisted personally in the moving, the question whether the latter was a fellow-servant or superintendent was for the jury." These decisions were handed down February 25, 1896, and constitute the latest utterance of that distinguished tribunal upon that subject. Many similar cases might be cited in other States, but enough States have been taken for that purpose. The plaintiff insists that under the circumstances of the case the superintendent had created an unsafe place and unsafe condition where the plaintiff worked at the time he was injured, and that the rule requiring the defendant to furnish a safe place and proper tools for his employees to work at and with has application to this case. Be that as it may, I have reached the conclusion that the question as to whether such place was safe or as to whether the superintendent was acting for the master in the discharge of the master's duties were questions for the jury as held by the Court of Appeals in the case of McGovern v. The Central Vermont Railroad Co. ( supra), and kindred cases. ( Wannamaker v. City of Rochester, 17 N.Y. Supp. 321; affd. without opinion, 137 N.Y. 529.) In McLean v. Standard Oil Co. of Indiana (21 N Y Supp. 874), plaintiff was injured from falling from a scaffold that defendant's carpenters had made, caused by a defective plank. ( Crowell v. Thomas, 35 N Y Supp. 936.) But assuming that the case of Crispin v. Babbitt ( supra) is to be regarded as announcing the law of this State unshaken by subsequent decisions of the Court of Appeals, it is easily distinguishable from the case at bar. As we have before said, in that case the superintendent and the plaintiff were plainly engaged in the ordinary work of the servant in the detail of the business. In the case at bar, as we have shown, the servant was taken from his ordinary work and put by the representative of the master at a work which it was the duty and the province of the master to control and perform, so that this case is within the rule in all its strictness asserted by the cases upon which the defendant relies. The motion for a new trial should be granted, with costs to abide event.


Summaries of

Sweeney v. Vacuum Oil Company

Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Fourth Department
Mar 1, 1896
3 App. Div. 615 (N.Y. App. Div. 1896)
Case details for

Sweeney v. Vacuum Oil Company

Case Details

Full title:Patrick Sweeney v. The Vacuum Oil Company

Court:Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Fourth Department

Date published: Mar 1, 1896

Citations

3 App. Div. 615 (N.Y. App. Div. 1896)