Lisanti v. William F. Kenny Co.

225 A.D. 129, 232 N.Y.S. 103, 1928 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8758
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 21, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 225 A.D. 129 (Lisanti v. William F. Kenny 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
Lisanti v. William F. Kenny Co., 225 A.D. 129, 232 N.Y.S. 103, 1928 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8758 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Kapper, J.

The defendant was engaged in demolishing a temporary bridge in Queens county which had been used by the Long Island Railroad Company during the period of construction by the defendant of a new bridge. In this work of demolishing the temporary bridge, the defendant, under an arrangement with the Long Island Railroad Company, in whose employ the decedent had been for sixteen years, obtained the use of a crane and the services of the decedent as engineer of the crane, and a fireman, for the purpose of operating it. This particular work in which the decedent thus became engaged began August 1, 1927, and continued until September 2, 1927, on which day the accident occurred which caused his death. The crane consisted of a large steel derrick carried on a flat car, on which was also located a cab within which was a hoisting engine. In the work of demolishing the temporary bridge, this derrick was attached to a girder weighing sixteen tons. It happened to be the last girder to be lowered or taken away from this temporary bridge. It was the claim of the plaintiff that the arm. or boom which raised or lowered the girder was affected by the working radius of the crane, such working radius becoming greater as the boom was lowered, in which event the lifting capacity of the derrick decreased proportionately; thus, according to the specifications, the lifting capacity at various radii was 31,500 pounds at twenty feet, 23,800 pounds at twenty-five feet and 18,800 pounds at thirty feet. Outriggers were furnished as a part of the equipment of the crane and came with it, their purpose being to increase the operating base and to stabilize the crane and prevent it from tipping, thus increasing the lifting capacity of the crane. The testimony was abundant that in every instance previous to the fatal one, when lifting girders of the same weight, the outriggers had been run out.

The negligence charged against the defendant was that the crane was negligently operated with too great a radius, and was [131]*131unable to lift the girder without toppling over; further, that the defendant’s foreman and superintendent negligently failed to run out the outriggers and thereby secure the additional lifting capacity which was necessary to this operation. The result was that, as the crane started to lift this remaining girder as its first operation on the morning of September 2, 1927, the whole structure, derrick, crane and all, toppled to the street below, a distance of fifteen to eighteen feet (with the engineer Lisanti in the cab of the crane), carrying with it the tracks and ties for a distance of about seventy-five feet, and resulting in the death of decedent.

The main question which this appeal presents is whether the decedent was the ad hoc servant of the defendant, the company having the contract for the erection of the new bridge and the demolition of the temporary one, or whether the decedent continued and remained the employee of the Long Island Railroad Company, concededly his general master, who hired him, paid him, directed him to go to this work, placing him in charge of its property, the car, engine and crane, and reserved the power to discharge him. Undoubtedly, if the situation required us to hold that the decedent became the ad hoc servant of the defendant, the negligence of the defendant’s general employees in not properly loading this derrick with the boom to be hoisted and lowered, would be regarded as the negligence of fellow-servants and the result of such holding would be to exculpate the defendant from liability.

While the defendant had a written contract with the Long Island Railroad Company for the erection of the new bridge and the removal of the temporary one, its agreement, characterized by the defendant as an “ arrangement ” for the use of the crane and its appliances as well as the engineer and fireman to operate it, was oral. This agreement was testified to as in the following form: The arrangement was that the William F. Kenny Company would pay the costs for the crane and the labor according to bills rendered by the Railroad Company, plus a certain percentage for overhead, and Workmen’s Compensation and liability insurance to be added afterwards.”

The appellant does not claim that it possessed the power to discharge the deceased or to hire any one in his place to operate the engine which controlled the movements of the crane. It was admitted that the decedent received his wages from his general employer, the Long Island Railroad Company, during all the period that he was operating this crane in the removal of the temporary bridge. He remained on the railroad company’s payroll all of the time. Agreeable to the arrangement ” between the railroad company and the defendant, the defendant paid the bills [132]*132of the Long Island Railroad Company for the use of the crane, the services of the deceased engineer and the fireman, the cost of the workmen’s compensation insurance, and the percentage for overhead. The testimony of the defendant’s foreman was that the defendant never interfered with the operation of the crane and that the decedent had full charge of all the work incidental to the operation of the crane, its mechanism, the handling of the levers and the brakes. The raising and lowering of the girder in question was controlled entirely in the cab by the decedent as the operator of the crane. The testimony of this foreman further was that the defendant and its employees “ never interfered ” with the operation of this crane and that Lisanti (decedent) had full charge of the operation.

While the decedent was described as expert in his operation of the crane,” he was admitted by the defendant’s construction engineer to be without expert knowledge with reference to the question of the radius for the lifting of the girders, as to which “ he had no technical knowledge.” At the same time, the setting of the radius for the lifting of the girders “ was a matter of technical knowledge.” That it was the decedent’s duty to so operate his engine as to lift the girder by means of the steam crane, and to back the crane along the tracks under its own power to the railroad flat cars waiting to receive the girder and to place the girder on such flat car to be then taken to the railroad company’s storage yards, was also established without dispute.

I have already referred to the duty of the defendant to safely attach the girder to the derrick or boom of the crane. When this was done the next step would be a signal to the engineer to start the operation, by means of his engine and levers, of hoisting the load. The grease and oil for the crane were furnished by the railroad company and all repairs to the appliance needed were made or to be made by it.

A change of masters so as to make a general employee a special, or for the time being the employee of another or special master, can only be brought about with the knowledge or consent of the servant.

The new relation cannot be thrust upon the servant without knowledge or consent.” (Murray v. Union Railway Co., 229 N. Y. 110, 113.) Judge Cardozo, writing for the court in the case cited, added: He must understand that he is submitting himself to the control of a new master. We are not concerned at the moment with cases in which the rights of third persons are involved. We speak of cases where the parties to the disputed relation are the parties to the controversy. Understanding may be inferred from circumstances, but understanding there must be. Common-law [133]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 A.D. 129, 232 N.Y.S. 103, 1928 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lisanti-v-william-f-kenny-co-nyappdiv-1928.