Liberty Mut. Ins. v. American Incinerator Co.

51 F.2d 739, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1557
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 13, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 51 F.2d 739 (Liberty Mut. Ins. v. American Incinerator Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liberty Mut. Ins. v. American Incinerator Co., 51 F.2d 739, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1557 (S.D.N.Y. 1931).

Opinion

WOOLSEY, District Judge.

The motion by the defendant for judgment dismissing the complaint as to the first cause of action is granted, without leave to amend, and as to the second cause of action it is granted, with leave to amend.

' The motion by the plaintiff is, consequently, denied.

I. These are cross-motions made in a cause duly removed to this court from.the Supreme Court of New York state for New York county.

II. The plaintiff is a corporation of Massachusetts and at the times here concerned was the insurance carrier of Bloomingdale Bros., Ine., the well-known department store, in respect of the workmen’s compensation insurance required by New York state.

The defendant Abbott Merkt & Co,, Inc., hereinafter called Merkt, is a corporation of the state of New Jersey.

The ground for removal of the cause to this court was that the cause of action against Merkt was severable from that against the other defendants. It seems to me from an examination of the complaint that such severability is established, for the torts alleged against each defendant spring from the separate duties of each. As a result the case is properly here and I have jurisdiction to deal with it.

III. On the 29th day of September, 1928, one George Frederick Taylor was employed by the Bloomingdale Bros, as fireman in charge of the boiler, incinerator, and other appliances in a warehouse owned by it. Whilst in the discharge of his duties Taylor was killed by the collapse of an archway qver a flue leading to the incinerator whereby he was precipitated into the flue and gas chambers thereof.

The incinerator is alleged to have been constructed by the American Incinerator Company, Ine., one of the defendants named, but not served with process.

The incinerator and appurtenances are alleged to have been constructed under the superintendence of and in pursuance of plans and specifications approved by the defendant Merkt.

It is contended that the construction was not in accordance with the specifications, and, due, to the negligent superintendence of Merkt, the incinerator was constructed in a faulty and careless manner without regard to recognized standards of engineering, with a result that it constituted, in effect, a dangerous trap and a continuing nuisance to all who had occasion to use it and to work about it.

It is alleged that after the death of George Frederick Taylor, his legal representatives, dependents, and next of kin elected to take Workmen’s Compensation under chapter 615 of the Laws of 1922 (Consol. Laws, e. 67), and presented a claim to his employer, Bloomingdale Bros., and that, on this claim, the State Industrial Board duly made awards for compensation to his widow, Sarah Taylor, and dependent children, that this award has been paid by the plaintiff, as well as money for the funeral and burial expenses of the decedent.

It is alleged that by virtue of the contract of insurance between the plaintiff and Bloomingdale Bros., securing compensation to the latter’s employees, and by virtue of the Workmen’s Compensation Law, under which compensation was awarded to Sarah Taylor, widow of George Frederick Taylor, and of the payments made by the plaintiff as insurance carrier under that award, an assignment was effected to the plaintiff of any cause of action which the decedent’s personal representative might have had against the defendants.

For a second cause of action, the plaintiff alleges that the cause of the death of Taylor, the employee of Bloomingdale Bros., was the failure of Merkt' to fulfill the terms of á contract entered into between it and Bloomingdale Bros., on July 12, 1926; that an award was made by the State Industrial Board in favor of the widow of Taylor for $8.655 per week from the date of his death during her lifetime and the sum of $1.322 from the date of his death until the certain named children reach the age of eighteen years; that by reason of payments made in pursuance of this award, the plaintiff has [741]*741discharged the entire legal obligation of Bloomingdale Bros, to the widow of the employee Taylor and his children, and is sub-rogated both by operation of law and by virtue of the specific terms of the said workmen’s compensation insurance policy in force between Bloomingdale Bros, and the plaintiff to all rights of recovery which might be had by Bloomingdale Bros, against the defendant Merkt, owing to its breach of contract of July 12, 1926, for the designing and construction of the incinerator.

The answer of the defendant denies various allegations contained in the complaint and pleads two affirmative defenses to the two causes of action therein stated. Of these two affirmative defenses, the second only is material here. In that it is alleged that George Frederick Taylor at the time of his death had two children who were over the age of eighteen years, and, consequently, not within the ambit of the protection of the Workmen’s Compensation Statute.

The defendant made a motion in conformity with the practice provided for under section 274 of the Civil Practice Act, directing that the plaintiff reply to the new matter thus set up in the second separate defense referred to.

An order for reply was entered, and thereafter a reply was filed in which it was admitted that George Frederick Taylor at the time of his death, September 29, 1928, left surviving a widow of the age of thirty-eight years and ten children. The dates of the births of the children are given; it is thereby shown that two of them, a daughter, Dorothy Taylor, bom in 1906, and a son, Charles Taylor, bom in 1907, were over the age of eighteen years at that time.

IV. Under the first cause of action, the plaintiff contends that it is subrogated to the remedies and rights of action of the employee Taylor, or his personal representative, against third persons whose injury may have caused his death.

The provision of the Workmen’s Compensation law invoked for this is section 29, which, so far as relevant, reads as follows:

“Subrogation to remedies of employees. If an employee entitled to compensation under this chapter be * * * killed by the negligence or wrong of another not in the same employ * * * [and] if * * * his dependents, elect to take compensation under this chapter, the awarding of compensation shall operate as an assignment of the cause of action against such other * • * insurance carrier liable for the payment of such compensation. * • * * ”

This section of the Workmen’s Compensation law must be read in connection with the other sections of that act, and, if so read, it will be seen that by section 16 of the act death benefits thereunder are limited, so far as children are concerned, to those under eighteen years of age.

Under section 130 of the Decedent Estate Law of New York (Consol. Laws e. 13), an action for death caused by negligence is maintainable only by the personal representative of the decedent, and any recovery in such action inures to the benefit of all next of kin.

Consequently the ambit of the recovery under section 29 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act is narrower and involves subrogation to the rights of a more restricted class of persons than the class permitted to share in a recovery by a personal representative, under section 130 of the Decedent Estate Law, for death wrongfully caused.

The result is. that suit in the name of.

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Bluebook (online)
51 F.2d 739, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liberty-mut-ins-v-american-incinerator-co-nysd-1931.