Jerdonek v. 41 West 72 LLC

143 A.D.3d 43, 36 N.Y.S.3d 17
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 28, 2016
Docket590726/10 103694/10 15715
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 143 A.D.3d 43 (Jerdonek v. 41 West 72 LLC) 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
Jerdonek v. 41 West 72 LLC, 143 A.D.3d 43, 36 N.Y.S.3d 17 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Friedman, J.P.

Plaintiff was injured in a fall from a scaffold while he was working in a boiler room that is a common element of the con *45 dominium apartment building at 41 West 72nd Street in Manhattan, known as the Hermitage Condominium. All members of this panel agree that plaintiff is entitled to summary judgment as to liability under Labor Law § 240 (1) against the party that owned the property on which he was injured when the accident occurred in February 2009. Because a declaration converting the building to condominium status was recorded in 2001, more than seven years before the accident, it is plain, under our precedents, that, at the time of the accident, the “owner” of the condominium’s common elements, for purposes of this tort action, was defendant the Board of Managers of the Hermitage Condominium (hereinafter the Hermitage board), not defendant 41 West 72 LLC, the entity that sponsored the conversion, regardless of 41 West 72 LLC’s continued ownership of some of the building’s individual units. It is the Hermitage board, not the former sponsor, that exercised exclusive control over the building’s common elements and entered into the contract for the lobby renovation project in the course of which plaintiff was injured. The Hermitage board is a named defendant that has appeared in this action and is actively defending it; there is no reason to believe that the Hermitage board might lack the resources to satisfy plaintiff’s ultimate judgment. Moreover, plaintiff himself, through his counsel at the argument of this appeal, has stated that he does not oppose dismissing 41 West 72 LLC from the action, so long as he is granted summary judgment against the Hermitage board. Accordingly, while we affirm other aspects of Supreme Court’s order, we modify it to grant 41 West 72 LLC’s motion for summary judgment dismissing plaintiff’s Labor Law claims as against it and, upon a search of the record, to grant plaintiff summary judgment as to liability on his claim under Labor Law § 240 (1) as against the Hermitage board.

Initially, we address the merits of plaintiff’s cause of action under Labor Law § 240 (1). Plaintiff’s testimony that he fell and was injured when the scaffolding on which he was working moved establishes prima facie that the statute was violated and that the violation was a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries (see Zengotita v JFK Intl. Air Term., LLC, 67 AD3d 426 [1st Dept 2009]). The conflicting testimony of Carlos Alvarado, an employee of defendant Bar Construction Corp., the general contractor that hired plaintiff’s employer, does not preclude partial summary judgment in plaintiff’s favor, since the statute was violated under either version of the accident (see Romanczuk v Metropolitan Ins. & Annuity Co., 72 AD3d *46 592 [1st Dept 2010]). Bar Construction’s foreman’s admission that the first level of the scaffolding did not have middle or top guardrails also establishes a violation of the statute (see Ritzer v 6 E. 43rd St. Corp., 57 AD3d 412 [1st Dept 2008]). The record does not support defendants’ argument that plaintiff was the sole proximate cause of his accident or a recalcitrant worker since plaintiff’s fall was caused in part by the fact that the scaffold was not properly secured and was not equipped with guardrails (see Boyd v Schiavone Constr. Co., Inc., 106 AD3d 546, 548 [1st Dept 2013]). There is no evidence that plaintiff disregarded an instruction to use any particular safety device (see generally Hill v Acies Group, LLC, 122 AD3d 428 [1st Dept 2014]).

Turning to the question of which entities (other than Bar Construction and the Hermitage board) are properly named as defendants upon plaintiff’s Labor Law causes of action, we hold that Supreme Court erred in denying defendants’ motion insofar as it sought summary judgment dismissing plaintiff’s claims under Labor Law §§ 240 (1) and 241 (6) as against defendant 41 West 72 LLC and plaintiff’s claims under Labor Law §§ 200, 240 (1) and 241 (6) as against defendant Property Markets Group, Inc. As to Property Markets, the record contains no evidence that this entity ever owned or controlled the premises where the accident occurred. The basis for dismissing the claim as against 41 West 72 LLC requires a more extended discussion.

As previously noted, plaintiff was injured in February 2009 in the boiler room of the residential apartment building located at 41 West 72nd Street in Manhattan. While defendant 41 West 72 LLC acquired the building in question by a deed recorded in January 2001, several months later, in August 2001, 41 West 72 LLC made the building subject to the Condominium Act (Real Property Law art 9-B) by executing and filing a declaration of condominium pursuant to Real Property Law § 339-f. 1 The declaration defines the common elements of the condominium (Real Property Law § 339-e [3]) to include *47 the building’s boiler room. As a common element of the condominium, the boiler room was, at the time of plaintiff’s accident, owned collectively by all of the owners of the building’s 130 units. 2 However, the conversion of the building to a condominium placed its common elements “solely under the control of the [condominium’s] board of managers” pursuant to the Condominium Act, which “recogni[zes] that the board exercises exclusive control over the common elements” (Pekelnaya v Allyn, 25 AD3d 111, 120 [1st Dept 2005]; see also Real Property Law § 339-v [1] [a] [requiring that the bylaws of a condominium establish a board of managers]). 3

*48 In keeping with the vesting of exclusive control of a condominium’s common elements in the board of managers, it is well established that a claim arising from the condition or operation of the common elements does not lie against the owners of the individual units; the proper defendant on such a claim is the board of managers (see Pekelnaya, 25 AD3d at 113; see also O’Toole v Vollmer, 130 AD3d 597, 598 [2d Dept 2015]; Rothstein v 400 E. 54th St. Co., 51 AD3d 431, 431-432 [1st Dept 2008]). Further, this Court has held that a statute imposing obligations or liabilities upon the “owner” of real property does not give rise to a claim against the owners of individual condominium units where the claim arises from the common elements or concerns a duty not connected with any individual unit (see Pekelnaya, 25 AD3d at 118-119 [rejecting a claim against unit owners under Multiple Dwelling Law § 78, which makes “the owner” of a multiple dwelling responsible for keeping the building “in good repair”]; Araujo v Mercer Sq. Owners Corp., 95 AD3d 624 [1st Dept 2012] [rejecting a claim against the owner of an individual condominium unit for violating Administrative Code of City of NY § 7-210, which imposes obligations on “the owner of real property abutting any sidewalk”]; see also Fayolle v East W. Manhattan Portfolio L.P., 108 AD3d 476 [1st Dept 2013], appeal dismissed 22 NY3d 979 [2013], lv dismissed in part, denied in part

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 A.D.3d 43, 36 N.Y.S.3d 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jerdonek-v-41-west-72-llc-nyappdiv-2016.