Summo v. Snare & Triest Co.

166 A.D. 425, 152 N.Y.S. 29, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7303
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 5, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 166 A.D. 425 (Summo v. Snare & Triest Co.) 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
Summo v. Snare & Triest Co., 166 A.D. 425, 152 N.Y.S. 29, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7303 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Carr, J.:

The plaintiff recovered a verdict for $5,000 for damages for the death of her decedent through the alleged negligence of both defendants. It was a “ scaffold case ” and the action was brought under the Labor Law. One of the ropes sustaining a scaffold which was being hoisted into place gave way while the decedent was on the scaffold, and he fell to the ground and was killed.

There were three hotly contested issues at the trial, and this appeal is based upon all three, viz.: First, was there actionable negligence on the part of either defendant ? Second, was the Snare & Triest Company the employer of the decedent ? Third, was the plaintiff the lawful wife of the decedent, and were the children (his also) his legitimate children ?

The appeal was argued unusually well by both counsel. The briefs are exhaustive. I will discuss briefly the points of the appellants in their order:

First. Was there proof of actionable negligence on the part of either defendant ?

The accident happened on one of the towers of the Pelham Bay bridge, which was erected under a contract between the city of New York and the Snare & Triest Company. A photograph of the bridge and its towers is to be found in the record. The decedent had been at work, on the day before the accident, cleaning spots of cement from the masonry surface of the tower. An ordinary painter’s ladder, with boards over the rungs, was used as a scaffold. The decedent and a helper stood upon these boards. The scaffold was suspended along the side of the tower by a rope looped over its top. It was lowered to the ground at the end of the day’s work. Early in the morning of the accident, the decedent and his helper took their places upon the scaffold, and other workmen began to hoist it up into place. At times one end of the scaffold would go up higher than the other during the hoisting process. But, according to the plain[428]*428tiff’s witnesses, the .scaffold had reached its proper place and was entirely level when the accident happened. The plaintiff produced several eye-witnesses, among them De Melia and Erdrono. These witnesses describe the whole occurrence. According to their .story, the suspending rope broke, the decedent fell from the scaffold and the scaffold in its fall struck the decedent as he lay upon the ground. There is proof by a plaintiff’s witness, Farrara, that the rope was in bad condition on the day prior to the accident, and that notice of that fact was given to Folian, the foreman on the job. The defendants’ contention is that the rope was comparatively new and in good condition; that its break was due to the alleged fact that the decedent had accidentally cut it on the day before the accident, and that when the scaffold was being hoisted into place the men who were hoisting indulged in skylarking to frighten the decedent’s helper, a young “ greenhorn ” Italian, by hoisting the scaffold ends irregularly, and that in so doing they allowed the rope to chafe against an iron bracket at the top of the tower and so to sever the strands of the rope. The plaintiff’s witnesses denied the skylarking. The defendant produced two eye-witnesses, Schilling and Kane. Both of these witnesses testified that there was skylarking during the raising of the scaffold. There was evidence for the jury that the rope was in a bad condition, and that the foreman, Folian, had notice of it, which he denied. Folian was not present at the time of the accident.

There was a case for the jury under section 18 of the Labor Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 31 [Laws of 1909, chap. 36], as amd. by Laws of 1911, chap. 693), and I do not recommend any interference with the verdict. In the complaint it was alleged that the rope “was defective and was old and worn out.” The appellants contend that, inasmuch as their proofs show that the rope was not “old,” but comparatively new, the verdict and judgment are not secundum allegata. But I think the word “defective” covers the situation sufficiently.

Second. The next proposition to be examined is whether the Snare & Triest Company was shown to have been the decedent’s employer.

The surface proof is that the defendant Steel and Masonry [429]*429Contracting Company was the employer of the decedent. It paid him and apparently directed him in work. The plaintiff, however, undertook to prove that the Steel and Masonry Company was hut a paper corporation, organized and controlled by the Snare & Triest Company for the sole purpose of doing the laboring work on its jobs, it furnishing all materials, tools and appliances to the Steel and Masonry Company and advancing all the moneys required for the payrolls of the latter corporation. The Snare & Triest Company had a contract with the city of New York for the construction of this bridge. It claims to have subcontracted with the Steel and Masonry Company for the actual work of construction, so far only as the doing of the labor was concerned. As before stated, it furnished all materials, all tools and appliances and likewise all cash for the payrolls of the Steel and Masonry Company, and, in addition, it paid to the latter company every two months five per cent of the net cost of the labor as shown by the payrolls. The president and vice-president of the Snare & Triest Company owned all the stock of the Steel and Masonry Company, except a few shares held by the officers of that corporation apparently for the purpose of enabling them to hold their offices. There was a mass of evidence put in to show the modus operandi of both corporations, and their intimacy of business relations. The court submitted to the jury the question whether the Steel and Masonry Company was really an independent subcontractor, or whether the Snare & Triest Company was the real principal and the Steel and Masonry Company but a “dummy” agent, instrument and working tool. The appellants claim this was error. It is argued that as the Steel and Masonry Company was a distinct corporate entity, differently officered, it was incompetent to go into the question of the circumstances of its organization, and its usual scope of business, which was concerned exclusively with the jobs of the Snare & Triest Company and its stock control.

The case at bar is in many ways like that of McCherry v. Snare & Triest Co. (130 App. Div. 241; affd., 198 N. Y. 532), where a controversy was litigated at the trial whether the Snare & Triest Company was the real principal, acting through a dummy corporation known as the Metropolitan [430]*430Bridge and Construction Company under an arrangement between them practically the same as that shown in this record with reference to the Steel and Masonry Company. I sat as trial judge in that action and recall its controversy very clearly. It was held there, necessarily, that it was competent to show that a corporation, apparently an independent subcontractor, was in reality but a dummy device or tool used to enable another corporation, as the true and secret principal, to carry on its manipulations as to hiring and directing of labor employed really for the purposes of the secret principal. This question came up again in McKenna v. Snare & Triest Co. (147 App. Div. 855). There the Metropolitan Bridge and Construction Company was involved, and the plaintiff recovered a judgment on the theory that the Snare & Triest Company was the true employer.

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Bluebook (online)
166 A.D. 425, 152 N.Y.S. 29, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summo-v-snare-triest-co-nyappdiv-1915.