Maceda v. Ellis Chingos Construction Corp.

22 Misc. 2d 269, 200 N.Y.S.2d 720, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3457
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 Misc. 2d 269 (Maceda v. Ellis Chingos Construction Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maceda v. Ellis Chingos Construction Corp., 22 Misc. 2d 269, 200 N.Y.S.2d 720, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3457 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1960).

Opinion

J. Irwin Shapiro, J.

At the end of the plaintiff’s case, the defendant Ellis Chingos Construction Corp. (hereinafter called “ Chingos ” or “ defendant ”) moved for a dismissal of the complaint. Decision was reserved. Without offering any proof, the defendant then rested, renewed its motion for dismissal and also moved for a directed verdict in its favor. Decision was likewise reserved on these motions.

The jury brought in a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $18,500, whereupon defendant renewed its previous motions and also moved ‘ to set aside the verdict on the ground it is excessive.” Decision was reserved on all of the motions with leave to both sides to submit memoranda. The plaintiff has submitted a memorandum of law; the defendant has not.

[270]*270The defendant was engaged in the construction of the Meadow Drive Elementary School at Albertson, Long Island. Its “ contract called for construction of the building itself,” but it had nothing to do “ with the mechanical trades such as the electricians, plumbing and heating and sheet metal. ’ ’

In connection with the performance of its contract Chingos ‘ ‘ let out the excavation subcontract, masonry and brick work subcontract, steel-roofing contract, roofing, painting, asphalt, tile.” That covered “ 15 or 20 subcontracts ” in addition to the “ concrete work and carpentry work ” which it was doing itself.

Chingos had “a superintendent on the job” whose responsibility it was “ to control its workmen and, in addition, “ to co-ordinate the work of the subcontractors. ’ ’

The plaintiff was employed by the Atlas Erectors Co., a subcontractor engaged by one of Chinos’ subcontractors to do the steel work on the building. On March 15, 1954 he had been on that job “ about two days, two and a half days he was on the job with 1 four or five other men” in his crew; their job was “putting steel beams in on the roof — on the extension of the school,” a “ one-story affair ”; “ other trades * * * were working all over the job ”; “ once the steel was raised to the level of the roof, you would then go up the ladder in order to be able to get into a position on the walls to bolt this steel in place ”; “ there was only one ladder there ” and “ everybody just used it just to get up to the top of the roof ” including laborers “ working on the front sections ” of the building.

After plaintiff had ascended the ladder and had completed the work with the steel then on the new section of the roof, he had to go down the ladder to “ set up another piece of steel.” As he was descending the ladder it “ gave way on the bottom ”; it “ started sliding out from under me ” and “ I knew I was going down, so I jumped to one of these bar joists and I grabbed hold of it, and I couldn’t hold on and I just fell to the ground ” some “ 15, 18 feet ” below. “ It was moving out and I knew darn well I had to get off it.” This ladder “ was always in the same place ” standing on “ loose gravel ” in a “ gravel bed on the ground ’ ’ leaning against the wall on the top and “ out from the wall, four, five feet ” at the bottom.

Whatever relationship Chingos may have borne to the school board or to other prime contractors on the job, it was the general contractor so far as plaintiff and his employer were concerned.

The contract which Chingos entered into with the owner was “ for the general construction of the building.” This, without more, was sufficient upon which to base a holding that Chingos (as to its subcontractors) was the general contractor even [271]*271though there were other prime contractors on the job. A 61 1 General contractor ’, in a building contract sense, is any person who contracts directly with the owner, the phrase not being limited to one undertaking to complete every part of the work.” (17 C. J. S., Contracts, p. 334.)

Chingos had the right to and did actually direct its 15 or 20 subcontractors on the job and co-ordinate and integrate the work of each of them. Thus, by every test of supervision and control of the various work activities necessarily engaged in by Chingos to fulfill “ its contract of general construction,” it had general over-all authority on this job as to all of the work it was required to do.

The undisputed proof shows that the ladder was in the same position in the new wing for at least two days prior to the accident, and that it was being used by all of the laborers as the sole existing means of access from the floor of the structure to the roof.

Chingos had a nondelegable obligation to provide safe ways and approaches for all of the laborers working on its subcontracts, plaintiff included, and any violation of this duty on its part obligated it to respond in damages to any worker injured as the result of such default in its duty.

In my charge to the jury I stated the applicable law to them, in part, as follows:

‘ So that so far as these subcontractors were concerned, these people to whom Chingos let out each division of this work which it was obligated to do under its contract with the school authorities, it became a general contractor and they became subcontractors.

“ Now, what is the duty of a general contractor to his subcontractors and to the employees of the subcontractors? Well, the law, in an effort to protect people who have to work for their living in hazardous occupations, says that under those circumstances the general, or prime, contractor must supply to those who are employed by his subcontractors a safe place to work.

“ Now, the testimony of the plaintiff, or the claim of the plaintiff, is that the place to work supplied here was not safe. And he says that he was an employee of a subcontractor, an employee of Atlas. He also says this: that this ladder was used in common fey the laborers of Chingos, the defendant’s subcontractors; that it was the only means of access to the first floor roof; that the steps had not been installed and that that was used, so the plaintiff says, for the two days that he was there by the laborers in common as a common way. * * * the law doesn’t care, whether or not this was Chingos’ ladder. [272]*272* * * If the ladder was used as a common way, as a common staircase, and was so permitted to be used with the knowledge and consent of Chingos by the laborers of his subcontractors, that being the only available way supplied for getting to the first story, then Chingos, the defendant, is responsible for any defective conditions that might have obtained in connection with the use of that ladder. * * *

The plaintiff says, however, that he wasn’t given a safe place to work because this ladder was placed in such a way upon a soft gravel bed that in the ordinary expectation of things the defendant should have realized that with a number of laborers walking up and down without it being tied down solidly at the bottom, without it being affixed in some way, it might reasonably have a tendency to slip. And that is just exactly what happened, says the plaintiff. And he says that by reason of that occurrence the defendant did not afford him a safe place to work. * * *

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

Related

Maceda v. Ellis Chingos Construction Corp.
12 A.D.2d 801 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1961)
Lucivero v. Long Island Railroad
22 Misc. 2d 674 (New York Supreme Court, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Misc. 2d 269, 200 N.Y.S.2d 720, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maceda-v-ellis-chingos-construction-corp-nysupct-1960.