New York Indemnity Co. v. United States Steel Products Co.

144 Misc. 85, 257 N.Y.S. 174, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1071
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1932
StatusPublished

This text of 144 Misc. 85 (New York Indemnity Co. v. United States Steel Products Co.) 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
New York Indemnity Co. v. United States Steel Products Co., 144 Misc. 85, 257 N.Y.S. 174, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1071 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1932).

Opinion

Gavegan, J.

New York Indemnity Company, as subrogee, brings this action, tried without a jury, to recover some $17,000 paid by it as an insurer, against liability for negligence, of Overseas Shipping Company, Inc., a stevedore. Plaintiff’s insured and the defendant in this case, United States Steel Products Company, became jointly liable to pay a judgment entered in favor of one [86]*86Rheinhardt, in a negligence action to recover for personal injuries maintained by him, against them. The insurer, New York Indemnity Company, claims it is entitled to be reimbursed for the entire amount it paid Rheinhardt. It claims in the first place that the fault which imposed liability on the shipowner in favor of Rheinhardt also imposes upon the shipowner liability to respond to the stevedore; and, secondly, that the stevedore was not found, in the Rheinhardt case, primarily negligent.

The injured longshoreman was working with others for the stevedore, loading a steamship from a lighter. The stevedore was doing the work under a contract with the shipowner, the defendant in this action. Rheinhardt’s injuries were due to a fall from a ladder, a rung of which broke as he was descending from the steamship to the lighter. The ladder was furnished to Overseas Shipping Company, Inc., by United States Steel Products Company.

In the Rheinhardt Case (218 App. Div. 818) there was testimony that an icy coating had rendered the ladder dangerous to use; that this had been called to the attention of the stevedore’s representative in charge of the work, who, nevertheless, failed to furnish any other ladder prior to the accident, saying, “ You will have to make the best of it; ” and that in going down from the steamship to the lighter it was necessary to hold on carefully with the hands, to avoid falling.

The verdict in Rheinhardt’s favor, against the stevedore and the shipowner, necessarily implies that the shipowner was found negligent because it furnished the stevedore with a defective ladder. There was no other ground on which the shipowner might be held liable. But the ground on which the stevedore was held liable to the injured longshoreman is not so apparent. Defendant in this action, United States Steel Products Company, contends that the jury found Overseas Shipping Company, Inc., negligent on account pf the icy condition of the ladder, whereas the plaintiff, the insurer of the stevedore, contends that, as a matter of law, the jury could have-held Overseas Shipping Company, - Inc., on no ground other than failure to make an adequate inspection of the ladder. Unless it can be determined that the stevedore was not held hable for allowing the danger from ice to continue unabated during the course of the work, defendant must have judgment. Indeed, it seems to be conceded that this subrogee cannot recover unless its insured was held hable to Rheinhardt solely for neghgence in inspecting the ladder. Counsel for plaintiff says: “ * * * The evidence discloses no causal connection between the ice on the ladder and either Rheinhardt’s fall, or the breaking of the ladder. It is elementary that in the absence of such causal connection, the presence of the ice, even . if neghgent, would impose no habihty.

[87]*87“ In addition, Rheinhardt assumed, as a matter of law, the risk of danger due to the ice. He knew the ice was there. He realized the danger therefrom. No promise of repair or replacement was made.”

In spite of these statements made on behalf of plaintiff, the evidence before the jury was such as to warrant a finding of fact that the icy condition of the ladder was a concurrent cause of the accident. Whether on that ground the jury were free to hold the stevedore hable to Rheinhardt is the difficult question in this case.

That they were not is asserted for plaintiff, its counsel referring to what was said by the Court of Appeals in Yaconi v. Brady & Gioe, Inc. (246 N. Y. 300). It was there held that the employee of a stevedore had assumed the risk of injury from slipping upon grease which he had called to the attention of a gangwayman who indicated that the condition would be remedied. However, none of the issues in the Rheinhardt action are to be tried over again in this case. What the court is now required to ascertain, if possible, is whether or not liability to the injured longshoreman was fastened on the stevedore because it allowed the danger from the ice to continue while its employees were engaged in loading the steamship. To obtain a decision in its favor New York Indemnity Company muts show, without question, that the jury in the personal injury action were not allowed to consider the slippery condition of the ladder in arriving at their verdict against the stevedore and based it, therefore, on negligence in inspecting the ladder.

The court charged that the stevedore was bound to furnish the longshoremen “ with a reasonably safe place in which to work, taking into consideration the character of the work to be performed as well as the ordinary hazards of the employment; ” and that, “if the employer failed to use proper and reasonable diligence to provide such a reasonably safe place in which to work, the employer is guilty of negligence * * *.”

It was charged as well that: “ Neither can the plaintiff recover if the happening of such an accident as this was one of the risks assumed by the plaintiff as incident to his employment. But it must be remembered that plaintiff did not assume any risks caused by the negligence of the defendants. The risks which a servant or employee assumes are either such as are incident to his employment after the, master has discharged his duty of reasonable care to prevent them, or such as are quite as open and obvious to the employee as to the master.”

The following also occurred: “ Mr. Mellen: I request your Honor to charge the jury that by unsafe employment as a longshoreman, the plaintiff assumed the risk of any injuries obviously incident to the discharge of his duties as a longshoreman. The Court: I so charge.”

[88]*88In deciding this case it would be proper to go no further than to determine from the record, including the pleadings, the evidence and the charge in the Rheinhardt case, whether the jury were left free to find the stevedore liable to the injured longshoreman for allowing the ladder to remain in an icy condition.

Rheinhardt’s complaint alleged that the accident and his injuries were due solely to the negligence of the defendants in his action, the parties to this action, “ in that the defendant Overseas Shipping Company, Inc.,” the stevedore, “ failed and omitted to furnish and provide the plaintiff with a reasonably safe place to work and with reasonably safe, proper and sufficient tools and appliances with which to perform his work; in that the said defendant failed and omitted to furnish and provide the plaintiff with a reasonably safe means of passing from the said steamship to the said lighter; in that said defendant, its vice-principals and others charged by law with the due performance of the duties imposed by it, were careless and negligent in the performance of such duties and of said work; in that the defendants otherwise wholly failed and omitted to exercise that degree of care, caution and prudence which the law, under the circumstances then existing, imposed upon them; ” and in that Overseas Shipping Company, Inc., and its codefendant were in other respects negligent.

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Related

Yaconi v. Brady & Gioe, Inc.
158 N.E. 876 (New York Court of Appeals, 1927)
Rheinhardt v. United States Steel Products Co.
218 A.D. 818 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
144 Misc. 85, 257 N.Y.S. 174, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1071, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-indemnity-co-v-united-states-steel-products-co-nysupct-1932.