Falk v. Crystal Hall, Inc.

200 Misc. 979, 105 N.Y.S.2d 66, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1868
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 200 Misc. 979 (Falk v. Crystal Hall, Inc.) 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
Falk v. Crystal Hall, Inc., 200 Misc. 979, 105 N.Y.S.2d 66, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1868 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

Matthew M. Levy, J.

In March of 1946, Crystal Hall, Inc., owned and operated a multiple dwelling in a congested city residential neighborhood. The front of the premises was adjacent to a grass plot which separated the building line from the sidewalk and the curb. The lawn was surrounded by an open wire fence, patched up in various places, and affixed to posts or uprights on each corner of the plot. The wire was of the thickness of one’s little finger.

At about noon of March 5th, a truck owned and operated by Sinram Bros., Inc., was engaged in delivering coal to the Crystal premises. The truck driver backed up the coal truck and — the better to chute the coal down to the cellar bin — mounted the sidewalk in front of the apartment house, and broke down a portion of the wire fence enclosing the grass plot in front of the house. Approximately twelve to fourteen feet of the wire fence were knocked down, with the result that the left side of the fence remained attached to one post, while the wire was detached from the upright on the right side. The fence wire lay on the grass plot between the sidewalk and the house. The truckman proceeded to deliver the coal, and, when the delivery was complete, he received payment therefor from the Crystal superintendent and drove away. The Sinram employee did not repair the broken wire fence, but simply left it where the truck had knocked it down — on the grass plot. The Crystal superintendent observed all this at the time; nevertheless, neither he nor anyone else on Crystal’s behalf or otherwise removed or repaired the broken wire fence, and, on the contrary, let it remain in the position where it was after the truck driver left.

Two days later — fifty-five hours later, to be precise — at about 7:00 in the evening of March 7th, Mrs. Julia Falk, a tenant in the Crystal apartment house, left her dwelling, walked out of the hallway of the house and onto the sidewalk, took a few steps, suddenly became tangled in the broken wire (which was then lying on the sidewalk in front of the building), fell to the ground, and sustained resulting injuries.

Mrs. Falk and her husband sued both Crystal and Sinram in negligence and nuisance. Crystal, as part of its answer to [981]*981the main suit, served a cross complaint upon Sinram, alleging that the accident was due solely to Sinram’s conduct and that if plaintiffs recover against Crystal it should be made whole by Sinram.

The issues were tried before court and jury. In connection with the.claim of the plaintiffs against the defendants, the jury were instructed, among other matters, with respect to the contributory negligence of Julia Falk, the negligence of each defendant, and the creation or maintenance of a nuisance by each defendant.

Then the jury were fully instructed with reference to the cross complaint interposed by Crystal against Sinram. I charged the jury, in effect, to consider whether or not Crystal had knowledge (actual or constructive) of the fact that the wire fence was broken, and that, if Crystal had such notice, whether it had a reasonable opportunity to remove or repair the broken wire fence. If so, I held that there could be no recovery over against Sinram. The jury were instructed that if, on the other hand, Crystal did not have a reasonable opportunity to remove or repair the offending fence wire, then they must find for Crystal against Sinram. I charged the jury further that Crystal owed a duty to use reasonable care, under all the circumstances and in the light of its information and knowledge, to keep its premises in good condition so as to avoid injury to others, and that it could not sit idly by, even though Sinram was the original creator of the condition, and say: “ I won’t fix the situation. Sinram did it. I’ll wait until Sinram fixes it, no matter how long it takes or how hazardous the condition is.”

Crystal requested the court to charge that if the jury found in favor of the plaintiffs against both defendants on the main case, then — ‘ ‘ the coal company, Sinram, being the active tort feasor, and the property owner, Crystal, being only a passive tort feasor, ” — the jury must necessarily find a verdict in favor of the defendant Crystal against the defendant Sinram on the cross complaint. I refused to charge as requested, and exception was taken by the defendant Crystal.

The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs against both defendants, and in favor of Sinram on the cross complaint of Crystal. Bach defendant moved to set aside the verdict in plaintiffs’favor. These motions were denied when made. There was no doubt in my mind as to these determinations. The defendant Crystal also moved to set aside the verdict in Sin-[982]*982ram’s favor on the cross complaint, and for judgment, notwithstanding the verdict, in Crystal’s favor against Sinram. Decision was reserved on this motion, as the question here seemed more difficult, and I shall now endeavor to dispose of it.

Crystal argues that the verdict must be set aside as inconsistent — since the verdict in plaintiffs ’ favor against both defendants necessarily imported a primary obligation upon Sinram as having originally created the condition and only a secondary liability upon Crystal for having subsequently permitted that condition to continue for an unreasonable length of time, and therefore there was ipso facto liability on Sinram’s part to indemnify Crystal. The kernel of the argument, as presented by Crystal, is that the active ” wrongdoer must respond in damages to the passive ” wrongdoer. Agreeing with Crystal, in principle, that, if Sinram alone were “ active,” Crystal would be entitled to recover over on the cross complaint against it, Sinram contends that, since Crystal has “ had actual, rather than merely constructive, knowledge of the existence of the dangerous condition, Crystal has not sustained its burden of proof with respect to showing freedom from active negligence, and accordingly is not entitled to judgment over on the cross complaint.”

The language of the cases supports in some measure the language of the argument. The authorities on the subject are collected in a recent article entitled “ Indemnity Between TortFeasors: An Evolving Doctrine in the New York Court of Appeals ” (Meriam and Thornton in 25 New York University Law Beview 845-862, October, 1950). To cite the cases here would be an act of supererogation.

Perhaps the understandable doctrine of comparative negligence— foreign to the common law of New York as between plaintiff and defendant — struggling to obtain a foothold in our jurisprudence, has found a surreptitious opportunity for expression in controversies as between one defendant and another. Thus, the legal jargon of “ active ” and passive,” and actual ” and constructive,” — and at times, equating one with the other — may well have been the juridical implements with which to project the moralistic theory of degrees of negligence and of culpability. The assumed thesis is, first, that it is obviously violative of natural justice to preclude any recovery whatsoever simply because a plaintiff’s comparatively minor negligence contributed in the slightest degree to an accident occasioned largely by the grievous carelessness of a [983]

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Bluebook (online)
200 Misc. 979, 105 N.Y.S.2d 66, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/falk-v-crystal-hall-inc-nysupct-1951.