Moffat v. State

116 Misc. 8
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedJune 15, 1921
DocketClaim No. 15586
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 116 Misc. 8 (Moffat v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moffat v. State, 116 Misc. 8 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Cunningham, J.

On April 9, 1915, and for some months previously, the claimant was a convict incarcerated in Sing Sing prison. He was a journeyman electrician and had worked for more than four years as an electrician’s apprentice and helper before becoming a journeyman. Walter A. Neaffie at that time [10]*10was the chief engineer of the prison and the claimant and several other prisoners were employed in maintenance work under his direction and control. In the prison yard wqs a building with a slate roof, known as the sash and door factory. A wooden framework stood on the extreme end of the apex or ridge of the roof and consisted of two uprights, both standing exactly on the ridge about seven feet apart, supported on each side by braces to the roof. Sustained by said uprights, and extending from one to the other directly above and parallel to the ridge, were three crosstrees, each of them containing about eight wooden pins about eight inches apart, with insulators, each pin supporting an electric wire. These wires were part of the electric equipment of the institution, and were insulated and charged at that time with 110 volts. The first crosstree was about two and a half feet from the roof, the second about two and a half feet above the first, and the third about one foot above the second. The eaves of the building were about eighteen feet from the ground at each side. Some of the slates of the roof were broken and some others were loose or missing.

On the date mentioned, Neaffie pointing to the roof said to the claimant: “ You go up on the roof and put two insulator knobs and tie them wires up there,” and the claimant answered: How am I going'to.get up there?” Neaffie replied: “ Gro inside of thé boiler room and take your ladder and get on the stairway to the edge of the roof and then get up there the best Way that you can go up.” The stairway mentioned was an outside stairway.

There was a tool box in the boiler room to which the claimant had free access, and any tools other than those in the box/ needed or required by him at any time in the course of his work he could procure, and [11]*11it was customary for him to obtain, from Neaffie, upon request and the giving of a receipt for them.

Neaffie, after giving these directions to the claimant, paid no further attention to the matter, and gave the claimant no other orders or directions, but went elsewhere.

The claimant immediately procured from the tool box a hammer, screw-driver, porcelain knobs and screws, which he testified was the equipment proper for the work, and climbed to the roof in the manner Neaffie had suggested. When he reached the framework, he stood on his toes, held a knob with a screw through the centre of it upon the crosstree about six inches above his head, and was about to strike the screw with the hammer, to start it into the wood, when one of the slates under his foot gave away, the hammer struck the knob which split, part of the knob striking the claimant’s left eye-ball, seriously injuring it and permanently impairing its usefulness. It is not clear from the evidence whether the slate broke or became dislodged. Moffat observed the condition of the roof and slates before he held the knob in position as described.

Chapter 609 of the Laws of 1918, which became a law May 10, 1918, is in the usual form of special claim statutes, and after conferring jurisdiction of this claim upon this court, directs award for such sum as shall be just and equitable ” if we find “ that such injuries were caused through the fault, negligence and carelessness of the state, its officers or agents, and without fault, negligence and carelessness of said Vincent •Moffat.”

It is conceded, of course, that in the absence of the special statute quoted, the state would not be liable in this proceeding. The state is not answerable for injuries arising from the negligence of its officers and [12]*12agents unless such liability lias been assumed by constitutional or legislative enactment. It is true that for some time an impression prevailed that the state’s immunity from liability for the tortious acts of its officers and agents had been waived generally by section 264 of the Code of Civil Procedure. This view has been dissipated and all doubt resolved by the Court of Appeals. Smith v. State, 227 N. Y. 405; Konner v. State, 227 id. 478.

The exemption of the state from liability for the torts of its officers and agents does not depend upon its immunity from action without its consent, but rests upon grounds of public policy that no obligation arises therefrom.” Smith v. State, supra.

This principle has been applied in various cases similar to the one at bar, and extended also to those agencies performing functions of the state. Lewis v. State, 96 N. Y. 71; Martin v. State, 120 App. Div. 633; Corbett v. St. Vincent’s Industrial School, 177 N. Y. 16; Ackley v. Board of Education, 174 App. Div. 44.

The right and power of the legislature to waive the state’s exemption from liability and to prescribe the conditions of recovery are very wide and are not confined to the principles defining liability in actions for tort between individuals. Thus in a recent case recovery was made conditional on establishment of the injury and of the extent of damage only, without necessity of any proof of negligence or freedom from contributory negligence. Munro v. State, 223 N. Y. 208. The gist of that case is found in the court’s statement, “ The basis for such allowance has been the moral obligation or the equity arising out of the facts.”

In this case, the special statute quoted makes liability conditional. upon proof, (1), that claimant’s “ injuries were caused through the fault, negligence [13]*13and carelessness of the state, its officers or agents,” and, (2), “ without fault, negligence and carelessness of said Vincent Moffat.” The determination, therefore, of liability depends upon the establishment of these two conditions. They are questions of fact.

The claimant has argued with much earnestness that the prison officials had no right to require Moffat to do this class of work, under the provisions of the Constitution and statutes. Const, art. Ill, § 29; Prison Law, art. 7, § 171; Cons. Laws, chap. 43. We are at a loss to know how this contention, if valid, would aid the claimant. If the policy and course of the prison officials were contrary to statutory provisions and forbidden, they were unlawful and without the scope of authority of the officials so acting. It would seem that their acts in that event would not be the acts of the state, nor of its agents or officers, as such, and that the result would be to negative liability rather than to impose it.

However, we have no doubt of the legality and propriety of the action of the prison officials in thus employing the claimant. The Constitution, article III, section 29, after prohibiting contract prison labor, provides: “ This section shall not be construed to prevent the legislature from providing that convicts may work for, and that the products of their labor may be disposed of to, the State or any political division thereof, or for or to any public institution owned or managed and controlled by the State, or any political division thereof.”

It is palpable that this provision permits legislation for the employment of convicts in work

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Bluebook (online)
116 Misc. 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moffat-v-state-nyclaimsct-1921.