Soderman v. Stone Bar Associates Inc.

208 Misc. 864, 146 N.Y.S.2d 233, 1955 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3876
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 208 Misc. 864 (Soderman v. Stone Bar Associates 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
Soderman v. Stone Bar Associates Inc., 208 Misc. 864, 146 N.Y.S.2d 233, 1955 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3876 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1955).

Opinion

DiGiovanna, J.

In this action it was stipulated between all counsel that the issues of fact and law arising upon the cross pleadings be submitted to the court for decision and judgment. After a lengthy trial the jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff against Stone Bar Associates Inc., the general contractor, and McHarma Construction Co. Inc., a subcontractor. Now the court is required to decide the issues of law and fact arising upon the cross pleadings.

Plaintiff was an ironworker in the employ of Atlas Erection Co. Inc., a subcontractor of the general contractor, in connection with construction of an apartment house at Third Avenue between 99th and 100th Streets in Brooklyn. In the course of his work he was required to carry heavy steel beams and girders from one place to another and to insert those beams in [865]*865recessed pockets which formed part of concrete walls of the entranceway to the building. On April 3, 1953, while using the top of one of these walls as a way to another part of the building, and while carrying a heavy girder, the plaintiff stepped upon a portion of the wall which appeared to him to be a solid, continuous concrete portion. He was precipitated to the floor below, a distance of about ten or twelve feet, thereby sustaining serious personal injuries.

The testimony in the case established that after steel girders had been placed in these recessed pockets bricklayers employed by another subcontractor, the codefendant McHarma Construction Co. Inc., were required to close up the remaining spaces with brick and mortar. The testimony is clear that the bricklayers had been working in the vicinity of the place of the happening of the accident at least up to March 27, 1953. The testimony of the shop steward of the bricklayers established as a fact in this case that, even though a beam had not been placed in this particular pocket, the bricklayers nevertheless placed unmortared loose bricks in this hole giving it the appearance of a solid way. Such a fact is implicit in the finding of the jury. The plaintiff charged the general contractor with negligence in that it failed to provide to him a safe place to work and a safe way or passage to a safe place to work, and charged the defendant subcontractor with negligence in that it actually created the dangerous condition which caused the injury to the plaintiff.

A serious question in this case, and one evidently decided by the jury, was whether the general contractor had notice of the existence of this condition. Its existence for at least a few days is presumed as a fact by reason of the jury’s verdict. The court finds as a fact in this case in its decision in respect to the cross pleadings that the general contractor had only constructive notice of the existence of the dangerous condition. Implicit in the jury’s verdict is a finding that the general contractor had notice. Whether this notice was actual or constructive cannot be deduced from the jury’s verdict, but nevertheless the testimony, in the opinion of the court, is overwhelming, and leads to the conclusion only that constructive notice was proven.

The subcontractor submitted a brief in connection with its motion for dismissal of the cross complaint. It argues that both defendants were in pari delicto. The cases cited in the defendant’s brief do not support that view. The case of Sheffield v. Yager (287 N. Y. 604) was one wherein the verdict established the fact that both defendants were active tortfeasors. In Eifert v. United States Fidelity & Guar. Co. (261 [866]*866App. Div. 1081), the language used must be supplemented by reference to the Trial Term decision (177 Misc. 516), where it appears that this involved scaffolding. It is clear that cases involving violations of sections 240 and 241 of the Labor Law are distinguishable from those involving section 200 of the Labor Law. In the latter, questions of active and passive negligence may arise; in the former, violators thereof are all guilty of active negligence. Hence this case has no application to the problems herein involved.

Scott v. Curtis (195 N. Y. 424) involved an action by an owner of property to whom coal had been delivered by the defendant for judgment by way of indemnity, judgment against said owner having already been rendered in another action. Judgment by way of indemnification was sought for the very reasons which cogently argue for such disposition in the instant case. At page 428 Chase, J. said: ‘ ‘ The liability of the owner of real property for injury to a passer-by for negligence in covering, or in failing to cover or guard such a hole in a sidewalk does not relieve the active or actual wrongdoers from the consequences of their acts. The liability to the passer-by is joint. As between themselves the active wrongdoer stands in the relation of an indemnitor to the person who has been held legally liable therefor * * # When an employee or independent contractor assumes the duty of performing an act which is dependent upon his personal care and attention and an injury arises by reason of lack of such care and attention such person is liable to the owner of the property if he is called upon to pay and does pay the damages arising from such negligence. ’ ’

Judgment in that case was reversed and a new trial ordered because of failure of proof on the part of the plaintiff to show that her liability was passive and that of the defendant active.

In submitting to this court’s consideration the case of Falk v. Crystal Hall (200 Misc. 979), it was argued that even if the owner of premises had mere constructive notice of the existence of a defective condition such notice would be sufficient to defeat him in an effort to obtain indemnity. However, that conclusion is reached only by way of obiter dictum, for on page 983 the court said: “ It cannot be said that Crystal has established that it was no more than passively negligent or that Sinram was a primary, as distinguished from an initial, wrongdoer. Regarding the situation as it existed when Sinram left the scene, as the court must do, the conclusion is inevitable that there was concurrence by Crystal with actual knowledge in the Sinram negligence which produced the injury. There was on the part [867]*867of both defendants affirmative participation in the sense of failure to perform duty, and thus there was physical connection with the danger, rendering them in pari delicto.”

So, despite the lengthy discussion concerning the effects of constructive notice insofar as active and passive negligence is concerned, it is clear that in that case in pari delicto liability was supported by a finding of actual rather than constructive knowledge. It is true that the ease was affirmed without opinion (279 App. Div. 1071), but that does not mean that the Appellate Division agreed with all of the reasoning in the opinion of the lower court. As stated in Carmody on New York Practice (Vol. 1, § 112): “ Where a decision is upon appeal affirmed by the Court of Appeals without opinion, the legal conclusions stated in the opinion of the lower court making the decision are not necessarily adopted and approved. Only the right of the party to recover is decided, and the court is responsible only for that, and not for the reason given nor the opinion theretofore expressed.”

Implicit in'the opinion of the Appellate Division is merely a confirmation of the finding by the trial court that both of the defendants in that case were active tort-feasors and nothing more.

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Bluebook (online)
208 Misc. 864, 146 N.Y.S.2d 233, 1955 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3876, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soderman-v-stone-bar-associates-inc-nysupct-1955.