Maltbie v. Bolting

26 N.Y.S. 903, 6 Misc. 339
CourtThe Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo
DecidedDecember 29, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 26 N.Y.S. 903 (Maltbie v. Bolting) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maltbie v. Bolting, 26 N.Y.S. 903, 6 Misc. 339 (superctny 1893).

Opinion

McADAM, J.

The action was to recover $20,000 for personal injuries to the plaintiff by reason of alleged wrongful and negligent acts of the defendants. It appears that on June 12, 1889, the plaintiff, while passing upon the southerly side of Liberty street, in this city, on her way from the ferry of the New Jersey Central Railroad, at the foot of that street, struck her left knee against a barrel, “or something of that kind,” and fell over it. The barrel had no head [904]*904on it and was placed in an open coal hole in the sidewalk, and anchored firmly in position by placing a stick entirely across the top of the barrel, to which was attached a rope, running down, and fastened below by heavy weights. The property belonged to the defendant Bolting, is situated at the southeasterly corner of Liberty and Washington streets, and known by the street numbers, “136 and, 136½ Liberty Street.” The cellar of the building became filthy, and was declared a nuisance by the board of health, which body directed Bolting, as the owner of the premises, to put in a waterproof" cellar. Bolting thereupon made a contract with the Moen’s Asphaltic Cement Company to carry out the order of the health board. The job was commenced May 4, 1889, and was completed June 25, 1889, —thirteen days after the accident happened. The performance of the work required the excavation of the cellar and vault bottoms so as to permit a new concrete bottom, 16 incites thick; the removal of partitions, and a quantity of debris; also, the introduction of building material, bricks, sand, cement for concrete work, and asphalt liquified by heat for laying the brickwork, which was to exclude the water which pressed into the cellar by the rising tides. This, in turn, involved the use of furnaces, boilers, etc., for heating the asphalt, the smoke and fumes from which are of a character that cannot be endured in closely-confined apartments. Ventilation was therefore required, not only for the safety of the workmen, but for the successful application of the cement. The company made temporary use of the coal holes for. the purposes of ventilation and introduction of building material while performing their contract, taking the precaution of endeavoring to secure the public from danger by introducing empty, but heavy, cement barrels in the opening, extending up sufficiently high to give warning to pedestrians, and prevent them from falling in. The plaintiff struck her left knee against one of the barrels, fell, and sustained injuries of so serious a character that, after much pain and suffering, amputation of the left leg, just above the knee, being found necessary, was performed, to save life. The plaintiff brought the action against the owners and contractors jointly, charging them with responsibility for the injury on the allegation that:

“They wrongfully and negligently removed the covering from the coal hole, * * * and wrongfully suffered and permitted the said coal hole to remain open, and wrongfully and negligently placed a tub, keg, or barrel, or something resembling a barrel, in the said coal hole, the same standing or protruding a short distance above the sidewalk, and there wrongfully and negligently kept and maintained the same.”

The answer of the cement company was, substantially, a general denial, while the defendant Bolting, the owner, pleaded in addition thereto the contractual relations existing between him and the cement company, whereby it agreed to do all the work required, not as the servant of the owner, but as an independent contractor, without any supervision, care, charge, or control on the part of the owner. The jury rendered a verdict against all the defendants for $17,500 damages. Without considering the arguments urged against the amount 'of the verdict, which, for present [905]*905purposes, may be assumed to be proper, we are confronted by legal objections of a serious character, which strike at the plaintiff’s right to any recovery, on the proofs offered, in the form in which they went to the jury for determination.

While it is undoubtedly true, as a rule, that the public are entitled to an unobstructed passage upon the streets, including the sidewalks, of the city, and that any person, by unlawfully placing ■obstructions thereon, may make himself liable as for creating or maintaining a nuisance, it is also true that any temporary use of a highway or street that is rendered absolutely necessary from the necessities of trade, commerce, or the erection of buildings, that does not unnecessarily or unreasonably obstruct the same, is lawful, and not the foundation of such an action. Wood, Nuis. § 258; Com. v. Passmore, 1 Serg. & R. 219; People v. Cunningham, 1 Denio, 524; People v. Horton, 64 N. Y. 610; Welsh v. Wilson, 101 N. Y. 254, 4 N. E. 633; Callanan v. Gilman, 107 N. Y. 360, 14 N. E. 264. The temporary use of coal holes, if required by the exigencies of trying situations, does not, if sufficiently guarded, constitute, under all circumstances, a nuisance per se. To make it a nuisance, in that sense, it is necessary to prove that the use was unusual, unnecessary, or unreasonable, or that the manner of use was inherently dangerous, and that the rights and safety of the public had not been sufficiently respected. See City of Allegheny v. Zimmerman, 95 Pa. St. 287. The board of health had ordered the work to be done, and, if the owner had not caused it to be done in the manner he did, the board of health could and probably would have had it performed at his expense. It was not work inherently dangerous, if properly conducted. The acts to be performed were legal, and not, therefore, within the special rule which holds that, where work authorized by an owner will necessarily produce an injury to the public, he cannot, by contract with another, free himself from the consequences of the act; in other words, that where the very act is wrongful, as against the plaintiff, the defendant cannot shield himself from the consequences by making a contract with another to do the wrong for him. Brennan v. Schreiner, (Super. N. Y.) 20 N. Y. Supp. 130. The case more properly falls under the more familiar rule of respondeat superior, which lets the master in charge of the work assume all the responsibilities connected with it, or the manner of doing it. The cement company was an independent contractor, under this rule; and the principle is settled that:

“When the owner of land contracts with a builder to erect thereon a building according to certain plans and specifications, the latter to furnish all materials and labor, and to be answerable to the owner only for certain results, he will not be deemed the servant of the owner, although the work is to be done under the supervision of an architect selected by the owner.” Thomp. Neg. 909, 910.

The same learned author says:

“The rule is of especial force where the owner, in pursuance of such a contract, commits the entire care and control of the premises to the contractor. Here, the owner will not be liable for an injury to a traveler in consequence of an excavation in the street being left unguarded.” Id. 910.

[906]*906Entire care and control were given to the contractor in this instance, and the owner.had neither architect nor superintendent to exercise supervision, and required the presence of neither. There was nothing, either in the terms of the contract or in the nature of the work to be done, that made the owner liable for the consequences of the acts of the contractor in placing or continuing the obstruction upon the sidewalk. Hexamer v. Webb, 101 N. Y. 377, 4 N. E. 755; Herrington v.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.Y.S. 903, 6 Misc. 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maltbie-v-bolting-superctny-1893.