Opinion
May Term, 1898.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs. All concur, except Adams, J., dissenting.
The scaffold or platform upon which the plaintiff was at work at the time of the accident was an ordinary contrivance, and there is no dispute whatever as to its character. It consisted simply of two planks, one end of which rested upon a wooden horse, and the other upon a narrow cleat attached to the window casing. The planks were not nailed or fastened at either end, and this fact was perfectly patent to the most casual observer. Shortly after the plaintiff mounted the platform, the weight of the two persons thereon caused it to sag in the center, in consequence of which the end towards the window slipped off the cleat, as might have been expected. The plaintiff had abundant opportunity to acquaint himself with the condition of the structure, had he made the slightest effort to do so; for he testified that, as he stood upon it, he was only eight feet from the window; that he could have seen, if he had looked, that the boards were not fastened to the cleat, and that it would not have taken him a minute to discover that fact. In these circumstances it seems to me that it will hardly do to say that, because the platform had been constructed by the defendant, the plaintiff had a right to assume that it was all right and perfectly safe. The case relied upon by the plaintiff ( Benzing v. Steinway, 101 N.Y. 547) was very different in many respects from the one we are considering. In that case much stress was laid upon the fact that the plaintiff had no opportunity to inspect the defective platform before it gave way; that it was doubtful if he could have discovered its defective condition had he looked, and that he had the personal assurance of the defendant's foreman that it was entirely safe. That case, therefore, with these elements in it, presented an issue of fact which ought properly to have been submitted to the jury; but here, we think, the rule which requires a party to take notice of a risk or defect which is perfectly obvious should have been applied; and, inasmuch as the plaintiff conceded that the defect was obvious and that he was utterly indifferent to it, he ought, in my opinion, to have been nonsuited. ( Shaw v. Sheldon, 103 N.Y. 667; Weston v. City of Troy, 139 id. 281; Dieboldt U.S. Baking Co, 72 Hun, 403.)