Page v. . Dempsey

77 N.E. 9, 184 N.Y. 245, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1358
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 13, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 77 N.E. 9 (Page v. . Dempsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Page v. . Dempsey, 77 N.E. 9, 184 N.Y. 245, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1358 (N.Y. 1906).

Opinion

Edward T. Bartlett, J.

The plaintiff is the owner of the house and lot No. 330 West Fifty-first street, in the borough of Manhattan, city of New York. The lot is about thirty feet in width and one hundred feet deep, upon which is a five-story brick and stone apartment house, containing space for ten families. In July, 1902, the lot immediately east of these premises was vacant, and workmen were engaged thereon in blasting rock in order to excavate for a cellar.

The complaint alleges that the defendant was a contractor engaged in the work, and that on several days in the month of July, 1902, on the 12th, 15th, 17th, 18th and 19th, the defendant caused much damage by such blasting, shaking and. *247 cracking the walls and partitions, loosening and destroying the mason work, plastering, papering and painting, and injuring the woodwork and plumbing.

The complaint further alleges that the defendant, by the improper manner of conducting the blasting and the use of unnecessary quantities of explosives and conducting the work in an improper manner, had not only committed this injury to the property, but had terrified the tenants, some refusing to pay rent and others threatening to vacate the premises. The plaintiff prayed for and obtained an injunction pendente lite, and the work of blasting in this improper manner was discontinued. Damages were demanded in the sum of five thousand dollars. The defense was practically a' denial. The trial judge dismissed the complaint on the merits at the close of the case, on the ground that the wrong Dempsey had been sued, as the contractor was defendant’s son.

There are two findings of fact,-as follows:1 (1) That the plaintiff was the owner and in possession of the premises and the building thereon, known as Mo. 330 West Fifty-first street, borough of Manhattan, Mew York city; and that in or about the month of July, 1902, blasting was being done on certain vacant premises immediately adjoining the said premises of the plaintiff on the east. (2) That said blasting operations were not conducted by the defendant, nor was the alleged injury to the plaintiff’s said premises, or the alleged damage sustained by the plaintiff by reason thereof, caused by his servants or agents, or by any one for whose negligence in the prosecution or management of said blasting operations the defendant is responsible.

The affirmance of this judgment by the Appellate Division was with a divided court and the question considered is a very narrow one. The learned court says in the prevailing opinion : “ The single question presented for our determination is whether the defendant was liable for the damages caused to plaintiff’s building by the negligent blasting. Upon one of two theories he would be liable; either that he was the contractor engaged in blasting, or- else as superintendent or *248 assistant, he directly participated in the negligent use of the explosives which injured the plaintiff’s building. Upon the latter theory, the defendant, whoever may hav;e been the responsible contractor, would be liable as a joint tort feasor. The difficulty, however, in holding the defendant liable upon this theory is the lack of evidence to support it.”

The dissenting opinion, in which two of the learned justices united, in regard to the question involved, reads in part as follows: “ The allegation in the complaint that the defendant was the contractor is immaterial. The material part of it is that the plaintiff’s property had been injured by the unlawful acts of the defendant. If this was true then the plaintiff was entitled to recover, irrespective of the capacity in which he acted.”

It may be conceded that if it was necessary for the plaintiff to prove that the defendant had entered into a contract for the removal of rock by blasting upon the lot in question, she has not sustained that allegation by uncontradicted evidence, and that the documentary proof introduced on behalf of the defendant, showing that the defendant’s son had entered into a contract in writing for the prosecution of this work, would render it impossible for this court to hold that there was no evidence justifying the finding that said blasting operations were not conducted by the defendant.”- We, however, agree with the dissenting opinion of the Appellate Division that the allegation in the complaint that the defendant was the contractor is immaterial.

If it be conceded that the only proof necessary for the plaintiff to make was that the defendant, James Dempsey, was in charge of this work, not as .contractor, but as having, direction and control thereof, it was established not only by the weight of evidence, but by what must be regarded as the uncontradicted evidence. It was proved by a number of witnesses, residents of the premises injured, that the defendant was frequently present and apparently directing the workmen as one in control of the work. Some of these witnesses observed this from adjacent windows and other places not *249 within hearing distance, where they were unable to give defendant’s words as addressed to the workmen, but testified to his gestures and other actions, indicating one supervising the men at work. Defendant was also seen to have been engaged with other workmen in arranging the blasting and charging holes with dynamite. A witness swore that the defendant was on the premises every day in July, 1902.

The defendant, when sworn by plaintiff as a witness, admitted that the boiler, drills and tools used on the work were his property, and kept in a tool house or chest on the premises, upon which appeared his name. He also admitted that he collected and receipted in his own name as contractor for the proceeds of the work, and deposited the proceeds in his own bank account, and drew out therefrom the amount of the men’s wages and paid them; that lie never had accounted for the money to his son, who was twenty-four years of age, unmarried, and lived at home with him.

It further appears that no witness testified to having seen the son on the work at any time. It was also proved that the son was duly subpoenaed as a witness on the trial and failed to appear. The janitor of plaintiff’s building swore that he saw the defendant on the work almost every day. “ I saw him charge the holes with dynamite.” Another witness swears: At different times I heard Mr. James Dempsey speak to the men about hurrying up the work and things like that.”

It was further proved that Rosenberg and. Beinberg were the owners of the premises on which the blasting was being conducted, and in the month of May or June they made a contract with one Thomas Burns for excavating and blasting. Thomas Burns testified that when the defendant James Dempsey and his son William J. Dempsey called on him after he made this contract, the defendant said, in substance, that he desired to do the work, and he had long experience in the blasting business; that when it came to making out the contract it was in the name of William J. Dempsey, the son.

It was further proved that on the 18th of July, 1902, *250 Thomas Burns gave the defendant James Dempsey this order on the owners of the premises, reading as follows: Messrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 N.E. 9, 184 N.Y. 245, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/page-v-dempsey-ny-1906.