John v. Baharestani

281 A.D.2d 114, 721 N.Y.S.2d 625, 2001 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2217
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 6, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 281 A.D.2d 114 (John v. Baharestani) 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
John v. Baharestani, 281 A.D.2d 114, 721 N.Y.S.2d 625, 2001 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2217 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

[115]*115OPINION OF THE COURT

Sullivan, P. J.

Plaintiff, a laborer at a construction site, sues to recover for personal injuries sustained when he fell some 30 feet from an unprotected and unguarded opening on the third floor of the building under construction, a three-story dwelling. Although it is unquestioned that plaintiff was working at the site at the time, there is a factual dispute as to what precipitated his fall. At issue on this appeal from the denial of his motion for partial summary judgment on liability pursuant to Labor Law § 240 (1) is whether plaintiff is entitled to such relief.

Defendant Franklin Baharestani is the owner of premises located at 85-49 Eliot Avenue in the borough of Queens. Yellowstone Town Houses, Inc., of which Baharestani was the principal, was retained as the general contractor and project manager for the construction of a residential six-unit building at the premises. Yellowstone’s responsibilities included overall job safety. On the date of the accident, September 8, 1998, plaintiff was employed by Galway Masonry, Inc., a third-party defendant herein, which was responsible for the erection of the exterior brick walls.

The first two stories of the building had been completed and plaintiff, who had been at the site since April 1998, was working on the third level. A large forklift, which, according to plaintiff, was not functioning properly and could not be moved from its position at the side of the building, was lifting bricks to the third floor. At both the building’s second and third floor levels, metal beams protruded through the brick, apparently as support for the floors of balconies that were to be constructed. There was also an opening on the outer wall of each floor near the metal beams that would eventually lead out onto the completed balcony. Permanent flooring covered both the second and third floors. According to plaintiff, boards, 12 feet in length, the functional equivalent of a scaffold, had been placed over the metal beams for workers to walk onto, enabling them to remove the bricks from the forklift and carry them inside the building. No safety device, not even a safety belt, had been provided for this makeshift scaffold.

Plaintiff states that when he arrived for work on the day of the accident, he discovered that the boards covering the metal beams on the third floor had been removed. Since he had to devise some means to reach the forklift in order to unload the distance from one metal beam to the other available, he placed a shorter board he had found over one of the metal beams, resting one end at the opening to the proposed balcony and the [116]*116other on a pallet sitting on the forklift. According to plaintiff, at around 11:30 that morning, he made two uneventful trips carrying bricks from the forklift into the building. On the next trip, after taking two or three steps to return to the forklift, he fell to the ground 30 feet below, taking the plank with him and sustaining the complained-of injuries. Plaintiff is unable to say whether the plank broke or moved.

Based on the foregoing account of the accident, plaintiff moved for partial summary judgment on liability, alleging a violation of Labor Law § 240 (1). In opposition, defendants submitted an affidavit from Ronald Gardiner, Galway’s president, and the transcript of his deposition, taken after the service of plaintiff’s summary judgment motion. Gardiner stated that he never saw any boards placed across the balcony beams. According to Gardiner, the forklift platform was about six inches from the side of the building and he, himself, operating the forklift, would step out onto the forklift platform, a wooden pallet, and pass the materials to his workers inside the building.

On the morning of the accident, Gardiner had raised the forklift to the third floor with a load of about 50 bricks from the day before that he himself had intended to unload. As he was speaking with a carpenter in another area of the construction site, plaintiff and another laborer walked over to the third floor alongside the forklift to see what work remained to be done. Gardiner, who did not witness plaintiff’s fall, heard a crash and immediately went to the ground level where he saw plaintiff lying with a wooden plank beneath him. According to Gardiner, plaintiff lost his balance and fell as he was attempting to throw a plank through the balcony door opening onto the four-by-four-foot brick-laden pallet sitting on the forklift “to make the wood pallet wider.”

. Based upon Gardiner’s testimony, defendants argued that disputed issues of fact, which, if decided against plaintiff, would take his claim out of the purview of Labor Law § 240 (1), precluded the grant of summary judgment. Based on Gardiner’s account, they argued, plaintiff’s work involved moving materials from one location to another on the same floor, not from one floor to another. Thus, they maintained, although plaintiff worked at an elevated level, his work did not involve a height-related risk. Moreover, they claimed, according to Gardiner’s version, plaintiff, at the time of his fall, was standing on a permanent floor, not the functional equivalent of a scaffold.

Noting the sharp divergence in the respective accounts of what occurred, the IAS Court denied plaintiff’s motion. It found [117]*117a question of section 240 (1) coverage due to the conflicting versions of what caused plaintiff to fall and accepted defendants’ argument that, should their version prevail, the permanency of the floor from which plaintiff fell would remove the case from the ambit of Labor Law § 240 (1). We reverse.

While plaintiff argues, somewhat persuasively, that Gardiner’s account of the accident is incredible as a matter of law,1 this is an issue we need not reach since, even under Gardiner’s version, plaintiff is entitled to the protections of Labor Law § 240 (l)2 as a matter of law, given that he was injured while engaged in construction work at a construction site when he fell through an unprotected and unguarded opening in the wall to the ground three stories below. It is conceded that other than a pair of gloves, plaintiff was not provided with any safety equipment whatsoever.

As has been often stated, the purpose of Labor Law § 240 (1) is to protect workers by placing responsibility for safety practices at construction sites on owners and general contractors, “those best suited to bear that responsibility” (Ross v CurtisPaimer Hydro-Elec. Co., 81 NY2d 494, 500) instead of on the workers, who are not in a position to protect themselves. (Zimmer v Chemung County Performing Arts, 65 NY2d 513, 520.) “[S]ection 240 (1) imposes absolute liability on owners, contractors and their agents for any breach of the statutory duty which has proximately caused injury [citation omitted]. The duty imposed is ‘nondelegable and * * * an owner is liable for a violation of the section even though the job was performed by an independent contractor over which it exercised no supervision or control’ [citations omitted].” (Gordon v Eastern Ry. Supply, 82 NY2d 555, 559, quoting Rocovich v Consolidated Edison Co., 78 NY2d 509, 513; see also, Amato v State of New York, 241 AD2d 400, 401, lv denied 91 NY2d 805.)

The list of safety devices enumerated in Labor Law § 240 (1) refers to tasks that “entail a significant risk inherent in the [118]

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Bluebook (online)
281 A.D.2d 114, 721 N.Y.S.2d 625, 2001 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-v-baharestani-nyappdiv-2001.