O'NEILL v. Gray

30 F.2d 776, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2521
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 18, 1929
Docket159
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 30 F.2d 776 (O'NEILL v. Gray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'NEILL v. Gray, 30 F.2d 776, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2521 (2d Cir. 1929).

Opinion

AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The first objection raised by the defendant is the statute of limitations. An action for malpractice must be commenced within two years after the cause of action has accrued. New York Civil Practice Act, § 50. This term has been regarded by the courts as embracing unskillful or illegal practice by doctors or dentists, which results in physical injuries to the person. It is coupled in the statute with other purely personal wrongs— “libel, slander, assault, battery, seduction, criminal conversation, false imprisonment, and malicious prosecution.” The injured person knows his injury, and may be properly required to decide promptly whether it is serious enough to justify suit. This is the construction which has been adopted by the state courts. Hurlburt v. Gillett, 96 Misc. Rep. 585, 161 N. Y. S. 994, affirmed 176 App. Div. 893, 162 N. Y. S. 1124; Camp v. Reeves, 209 App. Div. 488, 205 N. Y. S. 259, affirmed 240 N. Y. 672, 148 N. E. 753; American Exchange Pacific Bank v. Touche, 131 Misc. Rep. 236, 227 N. Y. S. 218. Under these eases, this statute ¡only applies to wrongs to the person, and does not affect attorneys at law who have negligently conducted a litigation. Furthermore, if “malpractice” were construed to include injuries to property caused by unskillful professional management, many claims, as in this ease, would be barred before they were discovered.

It is also clear that the cause of action here is not “to recover damages for a personal injury resulting from negligence” embraced in the three-year statute of limitations provided in section 49 of the New York Civil Practice Act. Section 37-a of the General • Construction Law of the state of New York (Consol. Laws, e. 22) defines “personal injury” as including: “Libel, slander, criminal conversation, seduction and malicious prosecution; also an assault, battery, false imprisonment, or other actionable injury to the person either of the plaintiff, or *779 of another.” It is clear from this definition that the present canso of action is not to recover for a personal injury.

The ease of Riddle v. MacFadden, 201 N. Y. 215, 94 N. E. 644, where suit was brought, under chapter 132 of the Laws of .1903 of the state of New York, for an injunction and damages, because the picture of the plaintiff had been circulated for commercial purposes without her consent, is relied upon as supporting’ the contention that the injury hero was a personal one, and comes within the three-year statute of limitations. But Riddle v. MacFadden, supra, has no relevancy, for an injury to the statutory right of privacy is plainly personal, while the damag’e here is to the property of the estate of which the plaintiff is administratrix, in that there has been a loss of a cause of action against H. H. Vought & Co. belonging to that estate.

General Construction Law, § 25-a, defines “injury to property” as injury “whereby the estate of another is lessened, other than a personal injury, or the breach of a contract.” Tho present action is cither for a breach of the contract of retainer, or for an injury to property. In either case, section 48 of the Civil Practice Act applies, and the period of limitation is six years.

Inasmuch, therefore, as six years had not elapsed between February 16,1923, when the plaintiff’s action against H. H. Vought & Co. was lost, and the time when this action was brought, there can be no bar of the statute of limitations, and we must consider whether the plaintiff offered proof which justified submission to tho jury of a good cause of'action against H. H. Vought & Co.

The Ron stairs had been erected by the workmen in the employ of a subcontractor, who did tho iron work, and not by the general contractor. At common law there would be no liability of an owner to employes of contractors for injuries received upon the premises, where he had turned over the premises to a contractor to construct a building, unless he was guilty of some affirmative act of negligence affecting the safety of such employes. Hexamer v. Webb, 101 N. Y. 377, 4 N. E. 755, 54 Am. Rep. 703; Engel v. Eureka Club, 137 N. Y. 100; 32 N. E. 1052, 33 Am. St. Rep. 692; Burke v. Ireland, 166 N. Y. 305, 59 N. E. 914; Joyce v. Convent Avenue Construction Co., 155 App. Div. 586, 140 N. Y. S. 663.

But a person wbo has general super-, vision of a building under construction may well, even at common law, stand in the position of one who can be said to immte workmen necessarily coming upon the- premises, whether they be his own or those of a subcontractor. To- such persons the general contractor owes “reasonable care to prevent damage from unusual danger which he knows or ought to know.” Indermaur v. Dames, L. R. 2 C. P. 311; Litsch v. Todds, Irons & Robertson, Inc., 239 N. Y. 559, 147 N. E. 194; Pollock on Torts (12 Ed.) page 516. But, irrespective of this, there was section 18 of the New York Labor Law (Consol. Laws, c. 31), providing that:

“A person employing or directing another * * * in the erection, * * * of a * * * building * * * shall not furnish * * * scaffolding, hoists, stays, ladders or other mechanical contrivances which are unsafe, unsuitable or in^proper, and which are not so constructed, placed and operated as to give proper protection to the life and limb of a person so employed or engaged.”

In Quigley v. Thatcher, 207 N. Y. 66, 100 N. E. 596, an employee of a subcontractor fell from an unsafe scaffold that had been installed by the general contractor, when he was using it as the only means to get to his work. The New York Court of Appeals held the general contractor liable for tho injuries which this employee sustained by reason of the unsafe scaffold. Doubtless there was a common-law liability, if the general contractors installed such a dangerous scaffolding and foresaw that the subcontractor’s men would have to use it. But the court in that case placed the liability upon the section of the Labor Law above referred to. Judge Hiseoek, writing the opinion, said:

“We think that when a contractor constructs and so locates a scaffold or platform that his subcontractor must of necessity or under the requirements of reasonable convenience in the performance of his work usé the same the contractor1 may be held to" have anticipated such use and to- have assumed liability to such subcontractor and his employees for the safety thereof.”

He also said that “this statute is one for the protection of woikmen from injury and undoubtedly is to be construed as liberally as may be for thé accomplishment of the purpose for which it was thus framed, and under such interpretation we think that a contractor may by course of events become liable to a subcontractor and his employees for the safety of a scaffold although originally and expressly he assumed no such responsibility.”

It may be said that the scaffold ia Quig *780 ley v. Thatcher, supra, was built by the general contractor, while here the stairway had been erected by an independent subcontractor. But the general contractor furnished the stairway, when he contracted for it and it was installed pursuant to the contract.' He also, like the general contractor in the Quigley Case, in effect cSArected,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 F.2d 776, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oneill-v-gray-ca2-1929.