Alfred E. Norton Co. v. Byers
Opinion of the Court
(after stating the facts as above).
“Warning.
“This hoist is for material only; all persons are forbidden to ride, stand on, or stand in shaft under penalty of instant dismissal.
“National Elreprooflng Company.”
At or about 10 a. m. on the day of the accident the deceased and one Finnegan were working on the eighth floor (next to the roof) carrying beams to put over the top of windows for lintels, when Foreman Swansberg appeared and told them that he wanted them to go to another job. He went over to a hod hoist on the same floor, but, failing to make^ connection with it, he ordered the two men to follow him up the ladder to' the roof, where the fireproofing company was concreting. Callan, the subforeman of the fireproofing company, was then standing on the hoist, which held two empty wheelbarrows, and he was apparently about to descend with it. As Swansberg stepped upon it he called to Finnegan and deceased, “Come on, youse.” Callan then stepped off. The two empty iron wheelbarrows had been pushed onto the hoist from the Sixth avenue side of the platform and stood side by side, occupying the whole width of the platform of the hoist, with their handles extending toward Sixth avenué. The foreman and the two workmen then stepped on, Callan pulled the bellcord to signal the engineer, and the hoist descended. McCabe, the engineer of the fireproofing company, who, was operating the hoist, noticed that when
The section (section 200) of the statute relied upon makes the employer liable for personal injury caused to an employe, who is himself in the exercise of due care and diligence at the time, “by reason of the negligence of any person in the service of the employer intrusted with any superintendence, or by reason of the negligence of any person intrusted with authority to direct, control or command any employé in the performance of the duty of such employe.” As the warning notice stated “dismissal” as the penalty for disobedience, it might be construed as being directed solely to the employes of the fireproofing company, whom alone that company could dismiss. But it is not necessary to give it any such construction. It may be assumed that the notice forbade any and every one from riding on these hoists. It may also be assumed that as the testimony showed, defendant had instructed its superintendent and all its foremen not to let its employes ride on the hoists and not to use them themselves. There was abundant evidence to support a finding that these warnings and orders had become a dead letter; that the foremen used the hoists whenever they chose; that Swansberg (the foreman in question) used them “pretty near every day”; that the superintendent of the fireproofing company knew of this and made no objections; that this was the general practice on jobs in New York City, even when the signs were up.
We find no proof that the men used the hoists regularly; apparently they had to walk; the foremen were the privileged characters. Swansberg was general foreman, with five or six assistants; he moved deceased and the other workmen from place to place on this job, and from this to some other job, just as he chose. If he directed deceased to come with him down the hoist to go to another place or another job, as the evidence indicates he did, we do not see why such direction was not within the scope of his activities, why it was not a direction of the employe in the performance of the duty of such employe. The court left it to the jury to say whether or not the words “Come on, youse,” were a direction. They found that it was, and, as it seems to us, correctly so found.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ALFRED E. NORTON CO. v. BYERS
- Status
- Published