Stewart v. Ferguson

34 A.D. 515
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 34 A.D. 515 (Stewart v. Ferguson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Ferguson, 34 A.D. 515 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Rumsey, J.:

The action was brought to recover damages for alleged negligence of the defendant which caused the death of the plaintiff’s intestate. The defendant was a contractor engaged in the construction of a. large building at Hunter’s Point, upon which the plaintiff’s, intestate was working as a bricklayer. The building had progressed until the bricklayers were at work upon.the wall between the sixth and seventh floors. A scaffold had been built at .that point upon which they were standing. While Stewart was engaged in his work there,, the scaffold gave way and he fell through five floors and was killed. The complaint was dismissed at the close of the plaintiff’s case, and . from the judgment entered upon that dismissal this appeal is taken. It cannot be disputed that- the jury would have been bound to find upon.,the evidence that the scaffold upon which Stewart stood at. the time of the accident Was improperly constructed, and that its fall was the direct result of that improper and unsafe construction. It is: claimed, by the defendant that the construction of" the scaffold was a detail of the work, for the performance of which lié had furnished sufficient proper material, and -that it had been intrusted . to: men who were competent for that, purpose." He insists that these- men.-were co-servants of Stewart, engaged upon the samé work, and if" they failed either to use proper material which had been furnished, or to put it together in the proper way, so that the [517]*517scaffold was safe to stand upon, their failure was the negligence of .a co-employee of Stewart’s, for which the defendant was not responsible. He invokes the rule laid down by the Court of Appeals in Butler v. Townsend (126 N. Y. 105), and by this •court in the case of McCone v. Gallagher (16 App. Div. 272). The learned court at the Trial Term held that the facts proved ■brought the case within that of McCone v. Gallagher [supra), and applying the rule laid down in that case, dismissed the complaint.

It appears that one Montague was the superintendent of the defendant in charge of the construction of the building, and had the control and management of it. It became necessary on a certain day to build this scaffold for the use of the bricklayers and "three men were set to work upon it. At the place where the •scaffold subsequently fell, it was supported by two uprights, one placed upon the other. From the upper one to the wall was placed what was called a putlock, nailed to the upright at one end, and at "the other end inserted in the wall. To make the scaffold safe it was necessary that the upright which supported the inner end of the putlock should be strongly braced.. It appeared from the testimony that three men were at work upon the scaffold in this place; that the upright had been erected and the putlock nailed to it and inserted in. the wall, but no braces had been placed to steady the upright. At that stage of the work the superintendent called away two of the men who were at work, leaving a single man, who was then at work upon the floor of the scaffold! It does not appear whether this person was a skilled .scaffold builder or not. It does ■appear, however, that the scaffold was completed shortly after the. men were taken away from the work, and the bricklayers were set to work upon it the next morning. Ho braces were put upon the upright, but it was permitted to remain in the condition in which it was left at the time the superintendent took the two men from the work. The plaintiff insists that this case is not within the rule laid ■down in the ease of McCone v. Gallagher. In that case the scaffold was used by carpenters who were at work upon the inside of a building. It was the duty of the carpenters to erect the necessary scaffolding, and the defendant, who was the contractor, had supplied a ;sufficiency of proper material to be used for that purpose. The material selected by the carpenters, however, was not proper, and [518]*518the scaffold - was on that account defective.. The defendant, however, took no part in the construction of it, and, exercised no control over it, blit the carpenters constructed it as they saw fit, using whatever material they chose. to select. The plaintiff there,, who was a. carpenter,, hut who had. taken no part in the- construction of the-scaffold, went upon it and was injured by its fall while he was. engaged in his work.. The court applied the rule laid down in. the, ease of Butler v. Townsend, and held that the scaffold was a, mere appliance of the work, and not a place upon which the. work was to-be done; .-.that the building of it.was only :a detail of the work to be: performed, by the men who were engaged in it,-and that if the - master furnished sufficient proper material to be .used in the construction of thé scaffold, he was not liable" for- -negligence to one-who was hurt by reason of its defect,, although the person building the scaffold had • erred in his selection of material to be used ■for that purpose. But in that case it was. said that, to establish :a cause of action for such an injury, the plaintiff must prove,, in addition- to the fact. that there was negligence- in the selection. of the materials for the building of the scaffold,, the additional fact that the master, or some one standing, in- the relation ■ of representative of the master,, assumed 'to- construct the: scaffold, and then directed the employees to- use.- it as- a constructed scaffold. In this case the jury, might have- found from the evidence, that Montague, the superintendent,, wlm stood in the relation of master towards Stewart, had taken charge- of the: construction of the scaffold, so far that he called the men- who- were engaged upon it away from it before it was properly completed^, and this caused it to be left in an unsafe condition, and, because of ■ his act the scaffold was not properly completed. They might also have found upon the evidence that there was not sufficient material furnished to the-men at work upon the scaffold to- properly brace it. Because of those two facts the cáse is not, as wé think,, within the-case of McCone v. Gallagher, but is within the exception stated in that case, and there was sufficient in the evidence to- warrant the • jury in finding that the defendant was guilty, of negligence..

The" case of McCone v. Gallagher was decided in April, 1891. The accident which is the subject of "this litigation occurred on the* 23d of November,-1891. On the thirteenth of Maiy in that, yeah [519]*519the Legislature passed the Labor Law, so called, which is chapter 415 of the Laws of 1897. That law took effect on the first day of June. At the time that law was passed, the rule laid down in Butler v. Townsend, (126 N. Y. 105) was thoroughly settled as the law of this State, fixing the liability of a master towards his employees in the construction of scaffolding upon which it was necessary for the employees to stand to do their work. That rule was, that a scaffold erected for workmen is not a place in which their work is to be done within the meaning’ of the rule requiring the master to furnish a suitable place in which to do his work, but it is an appliance or instrumentality by means of which the work is to be done, and that if the master furnished proper material with which to build the scaffold he was- not liable for the negligent act of one of his employees in building it; but that if any employee at work upon it received an injury because of the defect in it, it was the negligence of a fellow-servant for which the master was not liable.

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Bluebook (online)
34 A.D. 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-ferguson-nyappdiv-1898.