Court Opinion

ID: 5725410
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-12 16:15:58.254215+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:40:47.253408
License: Public Domain

Botein, P. J.
Plaintiff’s intestate, Thomas Davis, was killed, and plaintiffs George Henry and Kenneth Tormey were injured when a scaffold on which they were working during the construction of a school building broke. Plaintiff Robert Henry, who was assisting in the work, was also injured. All four were employed by Artistic Bronze Tablet Co., Inc. (Artistic), a subcontractor of defendant Caristo Construction Corp. (Caristo), which was the general contractor. Artistic had entered into a subcontract with Caristo by which it agreed to furnish the labor, materials and equipment for the performance of the bronzework and aluminum work on the job. Defendant Board of Education of the City of New York was the owner of the building under construction. An action to recover for the wrongful death of Davis was brought against Caristo, the Board of Education and one John Greene, who was the owner of the scaffold which he rented to Artistic. The other three plaintiffs sued Caristo and Greene in a separate action (Action No. 2).
The actions were consolidated and tried, resulting in judgments in varying amounts for the four plaintiffs against Caristo and Board of Education. The cross complaints or third-party complaints of Caristo against Artistic and Greene in the Davis action, and against Artistic in Action No. 2 were dismissed, as was the cross complaint of Board of Education against Caristo in the Davis action. Board of Education and Caristo appeal from the judgment entered in favor of plaintiffs and from the above-mentioned dismissals of their cross complaints or third-party complaints.
*385Upon the trial of the consolidated action it was undisputed that Caristo was to perform, no part of the work subcontracted to Artistic, and that it supervised Artistic’s work only to the extent of satisfying itself that the contractor performed the work in accordance with plans and specifications and in a prompt and diligent manner. One Koehler was the superintendent for Caristo, and Macanna was the inspector on the job for the board. It was the latter’s duty to see to it that the general contractor and all others on the job did their work in accordance with plans and specifications.
The scaffold, which was rented by Artistic from Greene, was required in order to place the ornamental ironwork on the windoAvs of the third floor. When it arrived on the job, Koehler complained to Macanna that it Avas inadequate for the heavy Avork contemplated and fit only for light burdens. When Koehler and Macanna spoke to Erasen, Artistic’s superintendent, however, he said that he thought the scaffold was absolutely safe, that his men Avere riggers and knew hoAv to erect and use a scaffold. Koehler testified that Avhen ho persisted he Avas told to mind his own business.
There can be no doubt, upon this record, that Thwis and the injured plaintiffs took their orders from Erasen, their superintendent, and that he exclusively planned and directed the progress of Artistic’s Avork. He supervised the testing, assembling, rigging and raising of the scaffold to the third floor; and he ordered that the scaffold be used.
The scaffold Avas supposed to bo rigged Avith one-quarter-ineh cables designed to go under the side rungs or runners, as well as with three Y-irons, one for each end and one for the center. When actually rigged, hoAvever, under the direction of Erasen, only the tvro end Y-irons were attached to the scaffold, and the cable was placed on top. If put underneath the scaffold, it Avould have operated as an extra brace.
While suspended outside a third-floor AxfindoAV the scaffold broke and opened in the center, Dbaús falling to his death and the others suffering injuries.
The gist of the evidence presented in support of plaintiffs’ causes of action is.found in a conversation allegedly overheard by Tormey, one of plaintiffs, among Koehler, Macanna and decedent Davis on the day prior to the accident His testimony Avas very vague and indefinite. According to Tormey, Davis had remonstrated ¡about using the scaffold and Koehler had ansAvered “ that the job has to get along, that we should use the scaffold till we get another one.” When asked whether he *386heard' Maeanná, the superintendent for the board,- say anything, Tormey testified, “ He nodded. He seemed; to .'agree with.it.” At the time of' the alleged conversation the scaffold had not been' assembled. '
• In order to find defendants liable either for; negligence at common, law or for violation of the provisions of. section '240 óf the Labor Law, plaintiffs in the posture of this case must show that defendants directed plaintiffs in the aspect.of the work that led to the accident, or had assumed control over that phase of the work (lacono v. Frank é Frank Gontr. Co., 259 N. Y. 377 j Kaplan v. 48th Ave. Corp., 267 App. Div. 272; Manguso v. Thirty-Third Equities, 286 App. Div. 70; Komar v. 'Dun é Bradstreet Go., 284 App. Div, 538). Certainly no such prima facie showing has been made against the board, upon testimony of an enigmatic nod that could convey a variety of meanings, and upon the witness’ conclusion that Macanna “ seemed to. agree with ” Koehler’s statement.
. Nor is the testimony as to Koehler’s assuming direction or control of the work believable upon this record. In view of the testimony by plaintiffs’ own witnesses as to Artistic’s tight control of the part of 'the job it had assumed to perform, it strains credulity to find that Koehler made the statement attributed' to him; or that if he did, Davis and his coworkers would regard it as a direction they had to follow. The verdict rendered against Cai’isto was plainly against the weight of the credible evidence.
Also, the court was requested to' charge that if “ subsequent to the time of the alleged conversation between the superintendent of Caristo and the' deceased, the scaffold was thereafter improperly put together, and that the improper putting together of the scaffold was the sole proximate cause of the accident ”, they could not find against defendants. The court refused to charge as requested. We believe the refusal constituted error and that this was a proper request. The failure to charge as requested permitted the jury to find defendants liable even if the sole proximate cause of the accident had been an improper assembly of the scaffold' by the subcontractor, Artistic — in which event defendants could not be .held liable (Kluttz v. Citron, 2 N Y 2d 379; Mendes v. Caristo Constr. Corp., 5 A D 2d 268).
Lastly, the indemnification agreement furnished by Artistic to Caristo expressed an unequivocal obligation to indemnify Caristo against its own active negligence, whether such negligence was wholly or partially responsible for plaintiffs’ injuries *387or whether the negligence consisted of the violation of a nondelegable duty. It was error to dismiss the cross complaint based on this agreement (see Thompson-Starrett Co. v. Otis Elevator Co., 271 N. Y. 36; Salamy v. New York Cent. System, 1 A D 2d 27).
Accordingly, the. judgment appealed from should be reversed, on the law and the facts, the complaint against defendant Board of Education dismissed, with costs, the judgment against defendant Caristo should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event, and the judgment in favor of Artistic on both cross complaints should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to Caristo, and the judgment in favor of John Greene upon the cross complaint in Action No. 1 affirmed.