Opinion
December Term, 1897.
Robert Thorne [ Frank V. Johnson with him on the brief], for the appellant.
E.J. McCrossin, for the respondent.
The action is brought to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff while working in the defendant's factory in November, 1895. The plaintiff was operating a steam stamping machine used for making small tin covers, and while so engaged his hand was caught and three fingers were cut off. The plaintiff had been at work in the factory only two or three days when he was set at work on this machine by Tice, the defendant's foreman. The machine has two corresponding dies, male and female. The upper die is set on the bottom of a cylinder, which has a vertical motion, coming down upon the lower die, on which the tin disc is placed for stamping. The lower die is screwed on to a sliding platform, to which a handle is attached, and which may be drawn entirely out of the range of the movement of the upper die, so that the finished disc may be removed with perfect safety. When the press is in use a leather belt passes over a large wheel at the back of the machine and keeps the wheel constantly revolving. There is, however, no continuous connection between this wheel and the cylinder, in order to operate which a treadle or lever at the bottom of the machine must be depressed by the foot or otherwise. The operator places his foot upon the treadle, and a single pressure causes the upper die to descend in a single operation of falling and rising during a single revolution of the wheel. A wire coil spring is attached by hooks to the treadle and to a rod above, and this lifts and holds the treadle up, thus preventing the movement of the upper die whenever the foot pressure on the treadle is removed. As long as the pressure on the treadle is kept up, the die continues to move up and down; and the same result follows when the spring is unhooked.
The plaintiff, when first put to work, received some instructions from the foreman as to the operation of the machine, but soon after he began his work, for some reason or other, the foreman took away the sliding plate to which the lower die was attached, and when he replaced it, fastened it into the machine with wire in such a way that it could not be drawn out in order to remove the disc from the lower die after stamping. The plaintiff had only worked a few moments when the upper die came down three or four times in succession, catching his hand between the dies and cutting off three fingers. There is evidence tending to show that he inserted the disc and had placed his foot on the treadle for the first of the three or four descents and had removed his foot, and that the subsequent descents resulted from the unhooking of the spring, which, as before stated, had the same effect as the removal of the foot pressure on the treadle.
The duty of the defendant to provide a safe and suitable machine for the plaintiff and to instruct him in its operation is not disputed; but the defendant claims that it fulfilled both duties, and that the accident resulted from a sudden disarrangement of the machine, which was a detail of the operation, for which it is not responsible, and that neither it nor its foreman had any knowledge or notice of that or of any previous defect. The difficulty with this contention is that, while the machine as originally constructed is shown to have been suitable and proper, there was evidence tending to show that the defendant's foreman, by wiring into place the table designed to be drawn out when each disc was stamped, for the purpose of removing it, prevented the plaintiff from using the means of safe operation which the manufacturer had provided. This was denied by the foreman, but the question of fact was submitted to the jury. If it had appeared without contradiction that the foreman warned the plaintiff of the new and additional danger, even to a practiced workman, it might be said that the plaintiff would have been held to have taken the risk of his employment. We have, however, the case of a comparatively unskilled workman thrust into a new and unusual danger, of which he claims to have been ignorant. The evidence justified the submission of this question to the jury and their finding that the master had not furnished a safe and suitable machine to its servant.
Neither can it be said that the foreman was a fellow-servant of the plaintiff. The case of Loughlin v. State of New York ( 105 N.Y. 159) points out the distinction between acts in which a foreman is the alter ego of the master, and cases where the negligence complained of is not the personal act or omission of the master, but of a co-servant, holding that it turns upon the character of the act or omission. If the co-servant whose negligence caused the injury was at the time representing the master in doing the master's duty, the latter is liable; if, on the other hand, the co-servant was simply performing the work of a servant, in his character as such, the master is not liable. (See, also, Brennan v. Gordon, 118 N.Y. 494.)
Applying this principle of these authorities to the case at bar, the foreman, Tice, in repairing or altering the machine by wiring-in the table, and in the matter of giving suitable instructions to the plaintiff after such alteration, was performing the duty of the master as his alter ego, and for neglect in either respect the master would be liable. ( Fox v. Le Comte, 2 App. Div. 63; affd. on the opinion of this court by the Court of Appeals, 153 N.Y. 680.)
In two similar cases this Appellate Division has held that the court properly submitted to the jury the question whether the defendant was guilty of negligence in placing the plaintiff at work upon a machine without warning him of the dangers which attended its operation. ( Borgeson v. United States Projectile Co., 2 App. Div. 57; Latorre v. Central Stamping Co., 9 id. 145.)
The learned justice, at the trial of this action, fairly submitted to the jury the questions to which we have referred, and the jury has found these questions in favor of the plaintiff. We see no reason to disturb the judgment. We have carefully examined the exceptions and do not see that any error which operated to the injury of the defendant has been committed.
The judgment is affirmed.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.