Antoniello v. Michael

151 F. Supp. 617, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3596
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMay 17, 1957
DocketCiv. A. No. 11911
StatusPublished

This text of 151 F. Supp. 617 (Antoniello v. Michael) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Antoniello v. Michael, 151 F. Supp. 617, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3596 (E.D.N.Y. 1957).

Opinion

RAYFIEL, District Judge.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff on November 24,1950, at Pier 2, New York Port of Embarkation, Brooklyn, New York, owned and operated by the United States. The action was brought under the Federal Tort Claims Act, Section 1346, Title 28, U. S. Code. The plaintiff joined Julius Michael and Morris Mishkin, doing business as Bond Industrial Maintenance Co., as defendants, but discontinued the action as against them' during the trial. The United States impleaded Pittston Steve-[618]*618doring Corporation, hereinafter called Pittston, claiming that the contract between them contained a covenant whereby- Pittston agreed to indemnify the United States against claims such as that herein asserted.

The facts are as follows: Pittston had a contract with the United States under which it was to perform stevedoring work on the piers of the New York Port of Embarkation. The plaintiff was employed by Pittston as an operator of a so-called hi-lo fork lift, a self-propelled vehicle used to move cargo from place to place on the pier. The front of the vehicle contained a boom to which were attached two fork-like devices which could be raised or lowered through the manipulation by the operator of certain levers. When the vehicle was in use, these forks were inserted into wooden pallets or platforms on which cargo had been loaded, and the pallets and cargo, resting on the fork, would then be transported to other places on the pier where needed.

On the day of the accident the plaintiff was operating a hi-lo fork lift on Pier -, 2. His vehicle, inclusive of the forks, was approximately fourteen feet in length and eight feet in height. The seat occupied by the plaintiff was about four feet from the ground and four or five feet from the rear thereof, with the steering wheel in front of him.

■ Pier 2 has a lower and an upper level. Cargo is brought from one level to the other by means of freight elevators, designated by numbers. The plaintiff was working on the lower level. Immediately prior to the accident he was engaged in transporting pallets loaded with cartons of cigarettes into elevator number 1 from a point about fifteen or twenty feet therefrom, so that they might be carried to the upper level.

. The 'opération of elevator number 1 was controlled by two sets of buttons. One set regulated the opening and closing of the elevator door, which operated vertically, and the other controlled the raising arid lowering of ' the elevator. These sets of buttons were located on the wall outside the elevator, on the left side as one faced the rear thereof. There were duplicate sets of buttons inside the elevator, which permitted control of the elevator and door from the inside.

The elevator, which was nine feet high, sixteen feet long, and nine feet wide, could hold three pallets of the size which the plaintiff was moving immediately prior to the accident. At about 4 P.M., on November 24, 1950, the plaintiff brought a pallet loaded with cartons of cigarettes into the elevator, which was then empty, set it on the floor in the rear thereof, and proceeded to back out of the elevator in order to obtain another. When he was about halfway out of the elevator, the elevator door fell upon him, pinning him to the wheel. By manipulating a lever on his vehicle which permitted it to move forward, he was able to free himself from the door before losing consciousness. His fellow employees then removed him from the elevator to an ambulance which had arrived at the scene, and he was taken to Shore Road Hospital.

The testimony disclosed that one Gia-como Rutigliano, a fellow employee of the plaintiff, operated elevator number 1 on the day of the accident. The plaintiff testified' that as he was backing his vehicle out of the elevator, immediately prior to the accident, he glanced back and saw Rutigliano standing about fifteen or twenty feet away from it. Bena-sillo, also an employee of Pittston, testifying in behalf of the plaintiff, stated that .Rutigliano was from ten to fifteen feet away from the buttons on the outside of the elevator when the door came down and struck the plaintiff. Both the plaintiff and Benasillo were cross examined at great length by the Government’s counsel as to allegedly contradic-' tory statements which they had previously made. The plaintiff was questioned concerning his testimony at an examination before trial, wherein he stated that he “was not interested, in the elevator riian” while he was backing his vehicle out of the elevator and could not say where he was at the time. Benasillo’was [619]*619questioned about a statement which he allegedly had made, the original of which was not produced by the Government. Unfortunately, Rutigliano was ill and confined to a hospital at the time of the trial, and could not appear as a witness.

The plaintiff and Benasillo, as well as one Sparacio, Pittston’s foreman in, charge of Pier 2, all testified as to. various occasions when the door at elevator number 1, as well as the elevator itself, had failed to function properly, The plaintiff testified as to two such incidents, one about three months prior to the accident herein involved, and another ■ about, a month prior, thereto, .in which the elevator do,or had. dropped,’ although the control buttons ha.d. not been pressed, He testified that he reported the latter.incident to one Captain Richards, the .Government officer ..in charge of -the pi.er, and reported the earlier one to his -foreman, Sparacio. The others hereinabove named testified to similar incidents.. .They, too, stated that they informed Captain'Richards óf those occurrences. Government work orders, received as the' Court’s Exhibit 1, reveal that repairs were- made to the door in question on six separate occasions between October ■ 4, 1950 and November 20, 1950. In fact, door and counterweight ropes on both' upper and lower levels were replaced on October 6, October 13 and October 20, 1950. Captain Richards was not called as a witness.

Witnesses for the United States tes.-tified as to the functioning of the elevator and door in question. They stated that an inspection' of the elevator and door, made on the morning of the accident,. disclosed no defect or malfunctioning of either. They also testified that immediately after the accident another inspection was made, which disclosed no defect in the door,- elevator, or the machinery and equipmént' which operated them.

The plaintiff contends that the United States owned, maintained and controlled the instrumentality in question, viz., the elevator and door, and hence, the accident having occurred in the manner^ claimed by the plaintiff, the doctrine of-res ipsa loquitur applies, and a presump-', tion of negligence is. imputed to the-United States, upon whom is cast the' burden ’ of coming' forward with an explanation of the'occurrence.

The defendant, United States of- America, on the other hand, argues that although it owned, maintained and ‘controlled the elevator and door, Pittston,-the plaintiff’s employer, was under obli-’ gation’ to' operate them, and, in fact, Rutigliáno, its employee, was designated ás the operator -of elevator number 1. Hence, the Government' contends, it was not in exclusivé control of the elevator, and door. It cites' numerous cases in support of its contention, including the casé of' Courtney v. Gainsborough Studios, 186 App.Div. 820, 174 N.Y.S. 855, in-which an elevator was involved, in which the Appellate Division reversed a judgment based upon the doctrine of res’ ipsa loquitur.

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Related

Courtney v. Gainsborough Studios
186 A.D. 820 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 F. Supp. 617, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antoniello-v-michael-nyed-1957.