Lee v. Cranford Co.

182 A.D. 191, 169 N.Y.S. 370, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7848
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 21, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 182 A.D. 191 (Lee v. Cranford Co.) 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
Lee v. Cranford Co., 182 A.D. 191, 169 N.Y.S. 370, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7848 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Thomas, J.:

If the plaintiff, injured by the defendant’s servants, has a remedy against the defendant under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, this action may not be sustained. The jury found that the plaintiff was not in defendant’s employ; the court decided that he was, and dismissed the complaint. The facts are few and simple, whatever the inferences that should be drawn. Muldoon, owning horses, trucks, and hiring drivers, from time to time made agreements with the defendant and others for the use of the outfits at agreed prices per day. The defendant was engaged in an undertaking that required the use of many teams and drivers in addition to its own horses and drivers. Besides Muldoon, there were ten or fifteen other persons with whom defendant made similar arrangements. At the outstart, defendant’s superintendent told Muldoon that he needed seven or eight teams for the next day and told him where to send them, and the teams came and were distributed upon the work, and Muldoon sent his bill weekly. The teams were used in such work as the defendant’s servants directed. Plaintiff had, on April 17, 1915, been employed by Muldoon for over two years, and had “ been off and on with Cranford before the accident ” [193]*193for more than a month. On the day in question he was directed by defendant’s servant to haul a load of lumber already loaded on one of defendant’s trucks, to which he transferred his horses. After the lumber had been drawn to the place of delivery, and while plaintiff was standing by the horses pending the unloading, whereupon he would return to defendant’s work, he was hit by a piece of timber negligently handled by defendant’s servants. The driver and the team during the time for which defendant made compensation, were entirely devoted to the service of transportation. The plaintiff’s hand was not otherwise put to the work. The horses merely drew loads for the defendant, usually in Muldoon’s wagons, exceptionally, as in the present case, in defendant’s wagon. Defendant’s superintendent testified: “ The foreman at the shaft gives them instructions what to do. * * * Q. He tells them where to take the stuff, or what stuff to take? A. Tells them to take a load of dirt and dump it, or take a load of lumber to the different shafts. Q. Wherever it is wanted? A. Yes, sir. * * * If a driver came there and got drunk on the job, we would lay him off. .If we did not lay him off, we would call up Muldoon and tell him to send another driver up, or we would send his team back. If the driver would not do what we told him, we would send Mm home.” It is due to the learned counsel for the appellant that notice should be taken of some views presented by him, although they may not influence the present decision. When plaintiff entered Muldoon’s employment, presumably there were terms stipulated, and the law implied others not mentioned, among them that the master would use legal care to furnish plaintiff with reasonably safe wagons and horses, and so maintain them; that he would use the required care to employ properly competent fellow-servants; that he would do his duty respecting the provisions of law enacted to throw safeguards about the plaintiff. It is unnecessary to enlarge on the mutual implied duties of masters and servants or to consider the servant’s assumption of the risk of his employment, and his duty to use care lest his own negligence contribute to his injury. Whatever the obligations of the plaintiff and his employer Muldoon, they existed when plaintiff left [194]*194his master’s premises on the morning in question, and attended the plaintiff at least until he reached the defendant’s place of work. It is necessary to take a survey of that. The defendant was a contractor carrying forward within the activities of a great city a public work of much range and diversity. To it were summoned for participation here and there, and appointed to varied occupations, men in direct employment of the defendant, and there were supplied the numerous facilities and appliances that are assembled for the complex uses of such a project. The men immediately employed, arid the defendant, had the relation of master and servants, which imposed various and ever-shifting duties, and, as to third persons, each man within the scope of his employment was. the defendant itself. Arrived also at such" place was the plaintiff, a half dozen or more of his master’s teams and drivers, and similar equipment, vehicles and men from ten to fifteen other trucking establishments. By this system all of these units, foreign to immediate hiring, reported to defendant’s agents and received orders committing them to share in the work, so that plaintiff and every other driver might come in contact, hurtful or otherwise, with each and all the others, as well with the difficulties and perils of the work existing in the nature of it, or in the manner of its execution, as well, also, with the instrumentalities that the defendant had outlayed to meet the necessities and exigencies. Every workman that defendant directly employed became its servant. Every tool, every machine, every structure that defendant supplied, became a part of the plant. Towards all that made up the ensemble, defendant owed a duty. In such case defendant’s wagons and horses must be selected with care and so maintained; every mechanical contrivance must conform to legal requirements at least so far as due care will permit. Everything that makes for a safe place to work must receive similar attention. Every servant must be selected with due regard for his competency. Every one exercising acts of superintendence may involve the defendant in liability to his employees. Every statute that regulates the relation of master and workman comes into play. Every culpable and injurious act of a servant, done in the course of his employment, makes the master liable, if the master [195]*195doing the act directly would have been hable. Did plaintiff, arriving as Muldoon’s servant, become defendant’s servant upon entry into association in the work? Did Muldoon’s horses, harness and truck become a part of defendant’s plant? Look at it first as between plaintiff and defendant and defendant’s servants, and then as between defendant and third persons. If plaintiff became defendant’s servant, all of defendant’s immediate servants, and all the teamsters present through arrangements with trucking firms, became fellow-servants. Did plaintiff take the risk of them, and did they each and all assume the risk of him, so far as the law imposes such risk? Did the master impliedly agree with each and every man connected with the affair that he had selected plaintiff as his servant' and that he had used due care in his selection and that he would continue to use care? And did defendant impliedly make a similar agreement with plaintiff as to every man in the works? Did defendant agree to the care required by law as between master and servant as to his works, ways and plant, and to all that the labor laws demand? Did Muldoon’s servant, sent there “ off and on,” impliedly agree that he would release defendant for any liability for injury through the negligence of its servants or agents, or itself, except so far as he was entitled to recover as defendant’s servant? In short, did defendant become the master and plaintiff its man? The fact is that defendant did not use any care in. hiring Muldoon’s team, or man. It did not know whether any part of the equipment was fit for the work beyond its knowledge of the reliability of Muldoon. It did not intend to present plaintiff as its servant and did not do so. It did not agree as to its other servants to accept ■ Muldoon’s team and the numerous other teams as its responsi-. bilities.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Myers v. May
5 A.D.2d 963 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 A.D. 191, 169 N.Y.S. 370, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-cranford-co-nyappdiv-1918.