McCafferty v. Duyvil & Port Morris Railroad

61 N.Y. 178
CourtCommission of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 61 N.Y. 178 (McCafferty v. Duyvil & Port Morris Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCafferty v. Duyvil & Port Morris Railroad, 61 N.Y. 178 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1874).

Opinions

Earl, C.

The defendant had the right to build its road in the place where it was located, and, hence, was not engaged in an unlawful enterprise. It let the contract to build the entire road to one Decker, and it seems that he subcontracted the whole or a portion of the work, and the blasting complained of was done by men employed by the subcontractor. Over these men the defendant had no control. It neither hired nor paid them, and could not control, direct nor discharge them. Hence, the rule of respondeat superior applies; and the principal for whom the men were working, and by whom they were employed, and not the defendant, is liable for the damage done to the plaintiff. There has been difficulty in the application of this rule, growing out of the fact that it is not always easy to determine whose servant the person committing the wrong is. There is no such difficulty in this case. Every man is answerable for acts done by the negligence of those whom the law denominates his servants, because such servants represent the master himself, and their acts stand upon the same footing as his own. In Hobbit v. London, etc. (4 Exch., 255), Rolfe, B., says: The liability of any one, other than the party actually guilty of any wrongful act, proceeds on the maxim gui facit per alium facii per se. The party employing has the selection of the party employed, and it is reasonable that he who has made choice of an unskillful or careless person to execute his orders should be responsible for any injury resulting from the want of skill or want of care of the person employed; but neither the principle of the rule nor the rule itself can apply to a case where the party sought to be charged does not stand in the character of employer to the party by whose negligent act the injury has been occasioned.”

This is not a case where defendant contracted for work to be done which would necessarily produce the injuries com[182]*182plained of. They were caused by the unskillful and negligent manner in which the blasts were conducted. The injuries were not occasioned in consequence of the omission of any duty which was incumbent on the defendant. It had let the contract, so far as appears, to a competent person, and had provided, in the contract, that he should be responsible for any damage occasioned by blasting. The defendant did not authorize or permit a nuisance upon its premises. If it had, it would have been liable for any damage occasioned by the nuisance. Hence, if the defendant can be held liable in this case, it must be upon the naked ground that it is responsible for the careless acts of the subcontractor’s servants over whom it had no control. There is no authority in this State for imposing such a liability under such a state of facts.

In Pack v. The Mayor, etc., of New York (8 N. Y., 222), the defendants had let a contract to one Foster to level and regulate Bloomingdale road, in the city of Hew York, and Foster had subcontracted with one Riley to do all the blasting of rocks upon the job ; and Riley, while engaged in blasting, threw rocks into the plaintiff’s house, doing damage for which the action was brought. It was held that defendants were not liable; that Riley was not their servant; and, hence, that they were not, under the rule of respondeat superior, responsible for his acts. This case was approved and followed in Kelly v. The Mayor, etc., of New York (11 N. Y., 432). In the latter case, the defendants had let the contract of grading a street, in the city of Hew York, to one Quin; and his servants, in blasting rocks in the street, caused a stone to be thrown against plaintiff’s house, and for the injury thus caused the plaintiff sued. It was held that defendant was not responsible for the negligence of Quin’s servant. It is impossible to distinguish these cases from the one now before us. They have never, so far as I can discover, been questioned.

In Storrs v. The City of Utica (17 N. Y., 104), while Judge Comstock criticised the case of Blake v. Ferris (5 id., 48), he expressly approved the two cases [183]*183above cited. In that case the defendant was held liable, because it owed a duty to the public to keep its streets in a safe condition for travel, and not because it was responsible for any negligent act of the contractor. In Water Company v. Ware (16 Wall., 566), the defendant had taken a contract to lay water pipes along the streets of the city of St. Paul, and then subcontracted the work, and the subcontractor, by his carelessness, caused the injury sued for. The defendant was held liable, because he had agreed, in his contract with the city, to be responsible for all such damages. Cliffobd, J., lays down the following rules applicable to such cases: “ When the obstruction or defect caused or created in the street is purely collateral to the work contracted to be done, and is entirely the result of the wrongful acts of the contractor or his workmen, the rule is that the employer is not liable; but when the obstruction or defect which occasioned the injury results directly from the acts which the contractor agreed and was authorized to do, the person who employs the contractor and authorizes him do to these acts is equally liable to the injured party.” In this case, the injury complained of did not result directly from any thing which the contractor was bound, by his contract, to do, but from the careless and wrongful acts of the men engaged in the blasting. If the blasting had been properly done the plaintiff would have suffered no damage.

In Butler v. Hunter. (7 Hurl. & N., 826), the plaintiff and defendant were owners of adjoining ancient houses, and an architect, employed by the defendant to superintend the repairs of his house, having considered it necessary to pull down and rebuild the front wall, agreed with a contractor to do the work for an estimated price,- and the workmen of the • contractor, in pulling down the wall, removed a brest summer which was inserted in the party-wall between defendant’s and plaintiff’s house, without taking any precautions by shoring or otherwise, in consequence of which the front wall of the plaintiff’s house fell; and it was held that there was no evidence for the jury of any liability on the part of the [184]*184defendant. Pollock, C. B.; said: “ Ho doubt, when the act is, in itself, a nuisance, the party who employed another to do it is responsible for all the consequences, for then the maxim ‘ qni faoit per aliurn faeit per se,’ applies. But when the mischief arises not from the act itself, but the improper mode in which it is done, the person who ordered it is not responsible unless the relation of master and servant exists.” In Reedie v. The London, etc. (4 Exch., 244), a company, empowered by act of Parliament to construct a railway, contracted, under said act, with certain persons to make a portion of the line, and by the contract reserved to. themselves the power of dismissing any of the contractor’s workmen for incompetence. The workmen, in constructing a bridge over a public highway, negligently caused the death of a person passing beneath, along the highway, by allowing a stone to fall upon him; and it was held that the company was not liable, and that the terms of the contract did not make any difference. Rolfe, B., said : “ The wrongful act here could not, in any possible sense, be treated as a nuisance.

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.Y. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccafferty-v-duyvil-port-morris-railroad-nycommnapp-1874.