Cole v. Long Island Lighting Co.

24 Misc. 2d 221, 196 N.Y.S.2d 187, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2350
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 24 Misc. 2d 221 (Cole v. Long Island Lighting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. Long Island Lighting Co., 24 Misc. 2d 221, 196 N.Y.S.2d 187, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2350 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

Benjamin Brenner, J.

A power plant was being built where the four plaintiffs fell from a scaffold while lifting a massive stone in behalf of a stonemason subcontractor. The defendant Caye Construction Company was a prime contractor which undertook to furnish the scaffold for the use of the masons. The defendant Wielandt Construction Company was the brick subcontractor which built it. The scaffold collapsed because it was defectively constructed and the direct cause of the tragedy was traced to a twisted part of an outrigger bracket. The stone fell with the plaintiffs, pinning the legs of two of them. Upon trial plaintiffs withdrew their claims based on common-law negligence and sought recovery solely for violation of section 240 of the Labor Law.

This is a second trial, the action having been previously tried when the jury rendered judgment for the defendant Long Island Lighting Company and disagreed as to the remaining defend[223]*223ants. The jury at this trial rendered a verdict against both remaining defendants totaling $260,000, three of the plaintiffs having been grievously injured. It had been instructed as follows: that there could be no recovery against either defendant for violation of section 240 of the Labor Law unless they found that plaintiffs were directed in the manner or method of their work as stonemasons; that while the defendants had contracted to furnish and construct the scaffold and actually did so provide and build the scaffold, such facts, standing alone, would not constitute direction of their work within the meaning of the Labor Law. Finally, the jury was instructed that even if they found that the defendants allowed the plaintiffs to make use of the scaffold, with knowledge by defendants of such use, this, too, would not constitute legally sufficient proof of direction of labor under the law.

I am satisfied that the evidence amply warrants a finding that the defendant Caye, the general contractor, directed plaintiffs in the performance of their labor. Various phases of the proof establish aspects of intervention therewith. Thus plaintiffs need not necessarily rely solely on Caye’s contractual obligation to furnish the defective scaffold for their labor. The evidence fully supports the conclusion that Caye not only co-ordinated work or supervised generally, but directed plaintiffs’ labor as well. A verdict against it, based on violation of the statute, is, therefore, fully supported.

As to the defendant Wielandt, the jury’s award rests on somewhat more than its erection of the defective facility. The following facts are implicit in the verdict and must be assumed to have been found: (1) that it built the scaffold under contract to do so; (2) that it was improperly constructed because of missing brackets and a defective one; and (3) that its foreman, Moseatur, when requested to do so, undertook to and actually laid additional planks thereon, suggesting to plaintiffs that they move two overlying and doubled-up planks along the scaffold where the area of stone work required additional support.

The sole question, then, is whether a finding of violation of section 240 of the Labor Law is warranted if based on the erection, repair and the suggested use of a defective facility upon which labor is performed. The answer is not readily at hand because there is much confusion in decisional law, construing the phrase “direction of work” as provided in section 240. What is more, some of the cases confound the principles of common-law negligence with that of violation of the statute.

The first law in this State dealing with improper scaffolding was enacted in 1885 and provided criminal penalties for “ know[224]*224ingly or negligently” furnishing unsuitable or improper scaffolding and various other devices used in erecting or repairing buildings (L. 1885, ch. 314). It did little to modify the common law since it required either knowledge or negligence. In 1897 the requirement of “knowingly or negligently” was removed from the statute and it continued in that form except for minor changes, until 1921 (L. 1897, ch. 415, § 18). That law provided as follows: “Scaffolding for Use of Employes. — A person employing or directing another to perform labor of any kind in the erection, repairing, altering or painting of a house, building or structure shall not furnish or erect, or cause to be furnished or erected for the performance of such labor, scaffolding, hoists, stays, ladders or other mechanical contrivances which are unsafe, unsuitable or improper, and which are not so constructed as to give proper protection to the life and limb of a person so employed or engaged.” It should be noted that the statute was worded in a negative fashion, that is, it only forbade the erection of improper devices. It was apparently intended to be applied only to those persons who actually furnished a defective scaffold, hoist, etc., whether or not actually constructed by such person, so that the emphasis was upon the aspect of furnishing as a prerequisite for liability and not on the employment or direction to perform labor. Additionally, there was little emphasis on direction to perform labor since most of the early cases involved an immediate employer as the defendant. This was so because there were no Workmen’s Compensation Laws until 1913.

The courts appear to have interpreted the intent of this provision of the Labor Law to make the appliances enumerated therein places of work and thus imposing the same kind of duty upon an employer who furnishes these appliances as the common law imposed upon an employer to furnish a safe place of work. (Jeffrey v. Miller, Inc., 222 N. Y. 135; Bohnhoff v. Fischer, 210 N. Y. 172; Stewart v. Ferguson, 34 App. Div. 515.) This was in direct contrast to the common-law rule which was that scaffolding and the other appliances specified in the statute were not places of work but mere details of the work for which the employer was not responsible if he furnished safe materials and employed a competent independent contractor to build the scaffold. If there was any defect which caused the injury the injured employees could look only to the party who actually constructed the appliance for damages and if the negligence of a fellow servant was responsible he could not recover at all. (Butler v. Townsend, 126 N. Y. 105.)

[225]*225Thus in Jeffrey v. Miller (supra) at page 138, Judge Pound, speaking for a unanimous court, gave this view of the effect that the statute had upon the common law: ‘1 The scaffold becomes a place of work instead of a mere detail of the work ”. Again, in Stewart v. Ferguson (supra) the court said at page 519: “ The making of the scaffold is no longer a detail of the work, the responsibility for which is imposed upon the servant, but the scaffold is regarded as a place furnished by the master upon which the servant is to work”. (Emphasis supplied.) That this became the adopted view is borne out by other cases. Some of the courts applied general common-law rules of negligence to the statute (Stewart v. Ferguson, supra, p. 520) as in common law or statutory (Labor Law, § 200) safe place of work cases. (Dittiger v. Isal Realty Corp., 264 App. Div. 279, revd. on other grounds 290 N. Y. 492.) The courts also ruled in these early cases that contributory negligence was applicable even where a violation of the statute was found (Gombert v. McKay, 201 N. Y. 27; McLaughlin v. Eidlitz, 50 App. Div.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Misc. 2d 221, 196 N.Y.S.2d 187, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-long-island-lighting-co-nysupct-1959.