May v. 11½ East 49th Street Co.

269 A.D. 180, 54 N.Y.S.2d 860, 1945 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2947
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 4, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 269 A.D. 180 (May v. 11½ East 49th Street 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
May v. 11½ East 49th Street Co., 269 A.D. 180, 54 N.Y.S.2d 860, 1945 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2947 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Callahan, J.

Plaintiff occupied an apartment as tenant in premises 11% East 49th Street, owned by the defendant. She was injured on October 4, 1939, when she slipped and fell on a quantity of fresh shellac found on the floor of her living room. Her apartment was being.painted by an independent contractor hired for that purpose by defendant through its managing agents. On the morning of the accident plaintiff admitted the painter who was to varnish or shellac the floors of her bedroom and living room. She left her apartment for about an hour. Upon her departure the painter was painting the bedroom floor. When she returned she entered her living room. She saw the painter standing in that room, but no work appeared to have been started there. The painter was about to move some of the living room furniture. Plaintiff walked toward her bedroom to examine the painting work that had been done there, when she fell and was injured. She found she had slipped on a streak or patch of fresh shellac, which she described as being about two or three feet in length, of narrow width, and about one quarter of an inch in thickness. Whether the shellac had been applied by brush, or had been spilled inadvertently, was not clear. Plaintiff’s evidence on this score is open to either construction.

Defendant contended on the trial and still contends that if any negligence caused plaintiff’s injuries, it was the negligence of the servants of an independent contractor, entirely collateral in nature, for which defendant is not legally liable. The trial court submitted the case to the jury, charging them that as a matter of law the painter was an employee of an independent contractor. It advised the jury that, while under the law the owner of a building who hires an independent contractor to do work is not ordinarily liable for the negligence of the contractor’s servants, there is an exception to that rule in a case where the nature of the work contracted to be done involves the creation of a dangerous condition, and the danger is readily foreseeable from the nature of the work. In the latter situation, said the court, the owner would be liable if the plaintiff, without negligence on her own part, was injured as the proximate result of the negligence of the employee of the contractor. Thus the issues as to inherent danger and negligence were left to the jury as questions of fact.

Defendant excepted to these instructions and unsuccessfully requested the trial court to charge the jury that if the work [182]*182was being performed by an independent contractor, the verdict must be for the defendant. The trial court had previously denied a motion to dismiss the complaint on similar grounds.

There was no proof of actual or constructive notice to defendant of any dangerous condition caused by contractor’s employee. In fact, no such notice to defendant is claimed.

Defendant-appellant calls our attention to a decision of this court in Rudger v. Mucklon Holding Co., Inc. (240 App. Div. 188), contending that that case is an express holding that the painting of an apartment house is not work involving inherent danger. It further refers us to the decisions of the Court of Appeals in Hyman v. Barrett (224 N. Y. 436) and Weinfeld v. Kaplan (282 N. Y. 348) in which the work involved was said to entail no inherent danger.

Plaintiff-respondent, on the other hand, asserts that this case is more analogous to such cases as Boylhart v. Di Marco & Reimann, Inc. (270 N. Y. 217) and Wright v. Tudor City Twelfth Unit, Inc. (276 N. Y. 303) where it was found' that there was danger inherent in the work contracted for, and thus the employer of the independent contractor remained liable.

The general rule that an employer of an independent contractor is not liable for the negligence of the latter’s servants, is subject to certain well-recognized exceptions, the principal ones being that such liability persists: (1) where the employer of the contractor is under a statutory duty to perform or guard the work, or (2) has assumed a contractual obligation to perform it, or is under a duty to keep the premises safe, or (3) where readily foreseeable danger is inherent in or created by the work assigned to the contractor. There was no claim here of violation of any statute, nor was there any claim that defendant had assumed a contractual obligation to paint the floors. The sole claim was that the work involved inherent danger.

The task presented is, therefore, one of application of a rule of law rather than its definition. We may, however, be aided in that task by a brief review of precedents where the application of such a rule was likewise involved.

Although the question of whether any inherent danger exists in work contracted for may arise under varying circumstances, a review of the authorities discloses that there are two situations in which it most frequently arises. The first is where the work creates a danger to the public by reason of its performance in or adjacent to a highway. The second has to do with work performed for the owner of property wholly within the confines of private premises. The present case is in the latter category.

[183]*183This case does not involve a situation where there was any obstruction placed in the highway as in Boylhart v. Di Marco & Reimann (supra), nor does it involve the performance of work in a city street, such as the cleaning of mats with soap and water on the sidewalk, as in Wright v. Tudor City Tivelfth Unit, Inc. (supra). We do not have a case, where the floor of a public hallway in a business building was being waxed, without warning to those invited to use the hall as means of ingress to the building, as in a case recently decided by this court. (Eisenberg v. Kemp, Inc., 256 App. Div. 698.)

Here the work involved consisted of the doing of decorative work within a leased apartment, including the varnishing of the floors of certain rooms therein.

As was said in Matter of Beach v. Velzy (238 N. Y. 100,105): Owners of apartment houses and other owners of residence property must at times call in painters, carpenters, masons, plumbers and other skilled workmen to work. Such work is ordinarily done by the job. * *

We deem that the present work came within the category of work that is not intrinsically dangerous if carefully performed.

As was said in Engel v. Eureka Club (137 N. Y. 100, 104), in enumerating the exceptions to the rule with respect to a property owner’s nonliability for work done by an independent contractor: “ There are cases of still another class where the thing contracted to be done is necessarily attended with danger, however skillfully and carefully performed, or, in the language of Judge Dillon, is ‘ intrinsically dangerous,’ in which case it is held that the party who lets the contract to do the act, cannot thereby escape from responsibility for any injury resulting from its execution, although the act to be performed may be lawful (2 Dillon on Mun. Oorp. § 1029, and cases cited). But if the act to be done may be safely done in the exercise of due care, although in the absence of such care injurious consequences to third persons would be likely to result, then the contractor alone is liable, provided it was his duty under the contract to exercise such care. * * * ''

In Hyman v. Barrett (224 N. Y. 436, supra)

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Bluebook (online)
269 A.D. 180, 54 N.Y.S.2d 860, 1945 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-1112-east-49th-street-co-nyappdiv-1945.