Secord v. Willow Ridge Stables, Inc.

179 Misc. 2d 366, 684 N.Y.S.2d 867, 1999 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 179 Misc. 2d 366 (Secord v. Willow Ridge Stables, Inc.) 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
Secord v. Willow Ridge Stables, Inc., 179 Misc. 2d 366, 684 N.Y.S.2d 867, 1999 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1999).

Opinion

[367]*367OPINION OF THE COURT

Andrew V. Siracuse, J.

Not long ago this case might have been considered a “routine” Labor Law § 240 (1) matter; the plaintiff, a construction worker, was working at a height and was injured in a fall when roof trusses collapsed at the construction site. As recently as its drastic revision of section 241 (6) jurisprudence, in Ross v Curtis-Palmer Hydro-Elec. Co. (81 NY2d 494) the Court of Appeals reaffirmed that the Scaffold Law was to be liberally construed, even though it applied only to the specific gravity-related hazards implied by the section’s list of safety devices (81 NY2d, at 500-501). The Court echoed the words of Rocovich v Consolidated Edison Co. (78 NY2d 509, 513): “It is settled that section 240 (1) ‘ “is to be construed as liberally as may be for the accomplishment of the purpose for which it was thus framed”. (See Quigley v Thatcher, 207 N. Y. 66, 68.)’ (Koenig v Patrick Constr. Corp., 298 NY 313, 319.) Thus, we have interpreted the section as imposing absolute liability for a breach which has proximately caused an injury. Negligence, if any, of the injured worker is of no consequence (see, Bland v Manocherian, 66 NY2d 452, 459-461; Zimmer v Chemung County Performing Arts, supra, at 521; Koenig v Patrick Constr. Corp., supra)”. The customary course for many Scaffold Law cases was for the plaintiff to move for summary judgment as to liability. This was granted in many more cases than in negligence actions, because once a violation of the section was established — generally because no safety devices had been supplied or the circumstances of the fall itself showed an inadequacy in the ladder or scaffold in question — the plaintiff need only show that the breach contributed to the accident: “Although the plaintiff is ‘required to show that the violation of section 240 of the Labor Law was a contributing cause of [his accident]’ (Phillips v Flintkote Co., 89 AD2d 724, 725), and this issue should be determined by the jury, where there is no view of the evidence at trial to support a finding that the absence of safety devices was not a proximate cause of the injuries, the court may properly direct a verdict in the plaintiffs favor * * * If proximate cause is established, the responsible parties have failed, as a matter of law, to ‘give proper protection.’ ” (Zimmer v Chemung County Performing Arts, 65 NY2d 513, 524.) Under these cases the plaintiff was required to show that he or she was a protected employee, engaged in one of the activities enumerated in the statute. If either the absence of safety de[368]*368vices or the failure of a device contributed to a fall from a height or an object’s falling from an elevated work place, he was entitled to judgment on liability as a matter of law.

In retrospect these holdings now appear to have marked the high-water point in a plaintiff-oriented interpretation of the section. Scaffold Law cases that might have been decided at summary judgment are increasingly being tried by a jury, courts have made ever more frequent reference to proximate cause issues and the recalcitrant worker exception, and what was once considered to be a form of absolute liability has now taken on the character of negligence. In the present case the defendant owner has cited a number of the most recent cases that appear to limit the plaintiff’s right to recover. For the reasons detailed below this court holds that they do not apply or should not be followed.

The facts of the case are not in dispute. Plaintiff Eric Secord was employed by a contractor, Woodford Brothers, Inc., which had been engaged by defendant Willow Ridge Stables, Inc., to construct a new roof over the stable’s indoor riding arena. On October 1, 1996, plaintiff and others were installing roof trusses, and plaintiff was waiting on one truss for another to be positioned so that he could fasten it in place. Before the roof was finished the trusses were supported by braces made of 2 by 4 lumber, but these braces had been removed by a fellow employee shortly before the accident; unsupported, the trusses began to fall — like dominoes, according to one account — and plaintiff fell 10 to 15 feet to the ground.

Defendant cites three cases in its memorandum of law, and all deserve close attention. They are Sprague v Peckham Materials Corp. (240 AD2d 392), from the Second Department, the much-discussed Court of Appeals case Weininger v Hagedorn & Co. (91 NY2d 958), and Bernal v City of New York (217 AD2d 568), also a Second Department case.1

In Sprague v Peckham Materials Corp. (supra) the plaintiff was repairing an air-conditioning unit while standing on a ladder. He “fell from the ladder on which he was standing when the right leg of the ladder sank into the gravel surface upon which it had been positioned” (240 AD2d, at 393). The Court held that he was engaged in the repair of a structure, and was thus entitled to the protection of the statute. It went on, however, to state: “Given the absence of evidence demonstrat[369]*369ing that the ladder was defective in any way, the issue of whether the ladder provided the injured plaintiff with proper protection as required under the statute is a question of fact for the jury” (supra, at 393-394). Defendant argues that the 2 by 4 braces supporting the trusses were safety devices, that there was no evidence that they were defective, and thus the question of whether they provided proper protection is one of fact for a jury, adding that “the plaintiff must * * * show that the violation was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries” (mem of law, unpaginated [emphasis added]).

The defendant’s reliance on Sprague (supra) is misplaced, and the case itself is not above criticism. While there was no allegation before the Second Department that the ladder was defective, the Court did find that the accident was caused at least in part by the ladder’s being placed on gravel. Labor Law § 240 (1) does not limit itself to the condition and design of the safety devices themselves; it requires that they be “so constructed, placed and operated as to give proper protection” (emphasis added). Surely a ladder resting on uneven or unstable soil is not properly placed (see, e.g., Cardile v D'Ambrosia, 72 AD2d 544 [“While the jury did not credit Frank Cardile’s testimony that the ladder itself was flawed, it clearly was of the belief that the ladder was not ‘placed and operated as to give proper protection’ to the worker”]; Haimes v New York Tel. Co., 46 NY2d 132 [unsecured ladder a violation]). Since any comparative negligence on the part of the employee is not to be considered (see, Rocovich v Consolidated Edison Co., supra), the plaintiff in Sprague would appear to have established that there was “no view of the evidence * * * to support a finding that the [violation] was not a proximate cause of the injuries, [so] the court may properly direct a verdict in the plaintiff’s favor” (Zimmer v Chemung County Performing Arts, supra, at 524 [emphasis added]).

In the present case there are, in any event, very few parallels with Sprague (supra). Simply because the 2 by 4’s were called “braces” neither establishes that they were safety devices within the meaning of the section nor proves that the requirement of the section has been met by their existence.

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Related

McMahon v. 42nd St. Development Project, Inc.
188 Misc. 2d 25 (New York Supreme Court, 2001)
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186 Misc. 2d 780 (New York Supreme Court, 2000)

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Bluebook (online)
179 Misc. 2d 366, 684 N.Y.S.2d 867, 1999 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/secord-v-willow-ridge-stables-inc-nysupct-1999.