Dougherty v. D. C. Weeks & Son

126 A.D. 786, 111 N.Y.S. 218, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3447
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 12, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 126 A.D. 786 (Dougherty v. D. C. Weeks & Son) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dougherty v. D. C. Weeks & Son, 126 A.D. 786, 111 N.Y.S. 218, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3447 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Clarke, J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing the complaint at the close of the plaintiff’s case, in an action for negligence. The defendant, a corporation, was the general contractor for the erection of a dwelling house in the city of New York. It made a subcontract with one De Yoe to do the plumbing work in said building. The plaintiff was a plumber’s helper employed by De Yoe in the Avork which De Yoe was doing as such sub-contractor. At the the time of the accident five floors had been completed but no stairs were in place. The various floors were reached by ladders which extended through the opoii stairway wells. The ladders projected some five feet above each floor. It wras necessary for DeYoe’s employees in putting in the plumbing to go to all parts of the building. The only way by which they could get from floor to floor was by using the ladders in the stairway wells. Masons and bricklayers, direct employees of the defendant, were also engaged in the construction work at the same time and continually used the ladders.

The plaintiff commenced work in this building the day before the accident and had used these ladders on that day, and had been up and down on them once on the day he was hurt, before the accident. He had been sent down from the fifth floor where he was working, by the plumber whose helper he -was, to bring up a tool weighing about eleven pounds. He started with it from the bottom floor carrying it on his right shoulder and holding it with his right hand. He testified that as he got to about the fifth rung from the fifth floor, or about the twelfth from the top of the ladder, he took hold of a rung above his head with his left hand, lifted his [788]*788left foot to the fifth rung and was in the act of lifting his right foot, his whole weight being upon the left, when the rung on which the left foot rested rolled around under his foot and• the whole weight of his body loosened the grip of his hand from the upper rung and he fell through the stairway well seventy feet to the bottom and received the injuries complained of.

He testified that on no one of the six trips he had made on the ladder in question, prior to the accident, had he noticed the loose rung. One of his witnesses, Carroll, testified that four days before the accident lie noticed a rung between the fourth and fifth floors that he felt rattled. It was loose or rattled, but did not revolve ; that two days before the accident he put his hand on it and tried to turn it all the way round; that he used some force from his wrist to make it revolve, and succeeded in so doing.

Lyons testified that he noticed a loose rung the day before the accident; that he had taken one step up from the fourth floor; that his hand slipped off the loose rung when it turned ; he stepped back upon the platform on which the ladder rested. This was all the testimony as to the condition of the loose rung in the ladder. Its liability to turn, at best, had continued but two days. Ho notice of this condition had been given by either of these men to the defendant, its superintendent, foreman, servants or any one else.

Plaintiff Testified that he saw the name D. 0. Weeks stamped on these ladders, and that is corroborated by other witnesses. It is also in evidence that defendant’s men moved the ladders from time to time. De Yoe testified: íl I don’t know positively whose ladders these were. We found them there when we wrent to work and used them. We continued to use them during the three or four months that we were there, as long as they w'ere there, until the stairs were built. I think there were no other ladders going up from the different floors except the ladders that I have already described. * * * I used to meet Mr. Weeks * * * nearly everyday.”

One of the witnesses testified that there were men there to shift the ladders and take care of them and tighten them up.

At the close of the plaintiff’s case defendant moved to dismiss the complaint upon the ground, first, that the plaintiff has failed to establish a cause of action in his favor against the defendant; secondl/y, that the plaintiff has failed to show that this defendant has been [789]*789guilty of any negligence or any violation of any duty that it owed to this plaintiff; thirdly, that the plaintiff has failed to show any notice brought home directly or constructively to this defendant in relation to the existence of an alleged defective ladder in a rung thereof. Further, upon the ground that it does not appear that the ladder upon which the plaintiff claims to have been climbing or mounting at the time that he sustained his accident was under the control of this defendant or was provided by this defendant for the purpose of use by the plaintiff or by others engaged in the building operations. The motion was granted and the plaintiff appeals.

The complaint having been dismissed at the close of the plaintiff’s case, every fact and every inference must be viewed in the most, favorable light to the plaintiff. While it is true that in the contract by which De Yoe became a sub-contractor for the plumbing work of D. 0. Weeks & Son, the general contractor, there was no provision which required defendant to furnish ladders to De Yoe or means of access to the different parts of the building, yet the fact remains that De Yoe and the defendant and their several employees were engaged in a common enterprise, to wit, the erection of-this building, of which the defendant was the general, contractor. The defendant having made the contract with De Yoe, De Yoe and his employees were in the building as matter of right and under that contract. They were not trespassers and they were not merely licensees. They were there under invitation and hy reason of the contract. While evidence was excluded when first offered to prove that there was a custom by which the general contractor was to furnish ladders, no proof of custom is necessary to show that when a contractor is engaged in erecting a building and has put up the only means of access to the different floors and employs a sub-contractor to do some particular work in that building, like plumbing, that he invites him to make use of the appliances which he has furnished necessary to get to the place to do his work. ISio plumber brings stairs to a completed house in order to get to the different floors. It would be as idle, it seems to me, to prove a custom of using the stairs found in the house as to require proof that when the general contractor had put up the building so far that the plumber, with whom he had made a plumbing contract, had to get to the different floors by such means of access that the means of access which [790]*790the contractor furnished was for the use, and provided by him for the use of, and intended to be used by, his sub-contractor and his employees.

There is sufficient prima facie proof that these ladders belonged to D. 0. Weeks & Son. It was putting up the building; the ladders had defendant’s name branded on them; they were there when De Yoe got there. There is no evidence that any other sub-contractor was working on or around the building.

Despondent argues that because the contract it made with De Yoe did not provide that it should furnish ladders there was no privity between it and the plaintiff and, therefore, it owed no duty to plaintiff and was not responsible for the injuries received by him. This contention, however, is answered by Coughtry v. Globe Woolen Co. (56 N. Y. 124); Devlin v. Smith (89 id. 470) and other like cases followed and applied in McMullen

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 A.D. 786, 111 N.Y.S. 218, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dougherty-v-d-c-weeks-son-nyappdiv-1908.