
    Ruth A. Post, Resp’t, v. Mary J. Stockwell, App’lt.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department,
    
    
      Filed March 31, 1887.)
    
    1. Negligence—Action for damages—Contributory negligence.
    The fact that a hatchway is dangerous to persons on account of the risk of falling through the opening: Held, insufficient to put persons passing helow, on their guard against forcible contact with falling articles.
    
      %. Master and servant—Responsibility for acts of servant.
    The master is responsible for the acts of his servant committed within the scope of his employment. Held, that the liability to third parties was not altered by the fact of the use by the servant of hazardous methods of ■ performing services.
    Appeal from a judgment entered upon the verdict of a jury, and from an order denying a new trial.
    
      J. E. Ludden, of counsel, for def’t and app’lt; W. W. Badger, of counsel, for pl’ff and resp’t.
   Van Brunt, P. J.

This action was brought to recover damages alleged to have been suffered through the negligence of a servant of the defendant while engaged in her business.

One Fisher was an occupant of premises No. 24 Vesey street, New York, and had been in the habit of selling to the defendant the paper shavings which accumulated in his (Fisher’s) factory.

The defendant was accustomed to send bags to the factory, in which the shavings were packed as they were made, and on the morning of the accident one of Fisher’s servants had sent word to the defendant to send and take away a lot of papers which had accumulated there, and the defendant, Muller, an employee of the defendant, was sent with a hand-cart to bring away the paper. Upon reaching the premises the paper, being upon an upper floor of the building, was thrown down a hatchway to be received by Muller, who undertook to guard the hatchway and passage beneath to prevent the passage of persons while Donohue, Fisher’s employee, was throwing down said bags of paper.

The plaintiff, in passing in the building in which she was employed, and being ignorant of this use of the hatchway, and not being warned by Muller, was struck by one of the bags and injured.

It appears that the plaintiff knew that the hatchway over the entrance was used for lowering paper and other things, but had never seen bundles thrown down the hatchway, and that Fisher himself had fallen through it about two weeks before.

Upon the trial a motion was made to dismiss the complaint, because it was shown that the plaintiff herself was guilty of contributory negligence.

It is true that the plaintiff knew that her employer had fallen down this hatchway from an upper floor some two weeks before, but this fact hardly called upon her to suppose that in entering the building she was liable to encounter men falling down the hatchway.

The knowledge of Fisher’s fall might have put the plaintiff upon her guard as to the danger of falling down the hatchway herself, but did not require her to exercise much greater care in passing in the building lest she might be fallen upon.

It is also true that she knew that this hatchway was used for the lowering of goods from the upper floors to the ground floor, but she had no knowledge that the dangerous practice of throwing goods down the hatchway had ever prevailed, and she not only had no reason to anticipate such a danger, but every reason to suppose that such a danger did not exist, as she had always seen goods lowered through the hatchway.

The mere fact of seeing a man standing in the passage is not shown to have been such a strange phenomenon as would necessarily attract the attention of the ordinary passer by, or that it was a circumstance calculated to attract attention or cause remark.

The plaintiff having no reason to anticipate the danger does not seem to have been guilty of contributory negligence in entering the building in the ordinary way.

The next question involved in this appeal is as to the liability of the defendant.

It is claimed that Muller was not about his master’s business when he undertook to keep people away from, the passage while Donohue was throwing down the bags.

Muller was sent to get this paper and bring it away, and he undertook to receive it. in this dangerous way, and it was because of his negligence in not keeping persons out of this passageway while he was engaged in receiving the paper that the plaintiff was injured.

In receiving the paper Muller was engaged in his master’s service, and if he participated in a method of receipt dangerous to passers by, and an injury occurred, his employer is responsible.

This was not an act of Muller outside of his employment; he was engaged in the very act for which he was sent, viz.: receiving the goods.

He knew that it was dangerous to receive them in that way, and he undertook to guard against that danger, and because he did not do so the accident occurred.

Muller’s relations to the defendant were not changed because he assented to this dangerous method of receiving the goods at the suggestion of Fisher’s servant. He was engaged in their receipt, and it was for the purpose of receiving these goods that he was sent.

It would seem, therefore, that the defendant was responsible for his negligence.

The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.

Brady and Daniels, JJ., concur.  