Thaney v. A. Friederick & Sons Co.

44 Misc. 134, 89 N.Y.S. 787
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 44 Misc. 134 (Thaney v. A. Friederick & Sons Co.) 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
Thaney v. A. Friederick & Sons Co., 44 Misc. 134, 89 N.Y.S. 787 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

Davy. J.

This action is brought to recover damages for the death of plaintiff’s intestate, caused by the alleged negligence of the defendant.

The accident occurred on the evening of November 6, 1902, in the Masonic Temple, located on Clinton avenue, north, in the city of Eochester, which was being built by contract and only partly completed. The defendant was doing the mason work on the building under a contract with the Masonic Temple Association. Eudolph Schmidt & Co. were the contractors for the electrical work and the plgintiff’s intestate, who was in the employ of Schmidt & Co., was assisting the electricians .in installing the electric wires in the building at the time of the accident. The defendant and the electrical company were independent contractors!

At the southwest corner of the fourth floor of the building was a work bench which was used by the intestate and the other employees of Schmidt & Co.; on this floor was a pile of broken brick and mortar. There were no guards around the elevator or stair wells; on the night of the accident the floor, elevator and stair openings were all well lighted. The pile of brick and mortar in the corridor opposite the stair and elevator wells had been there ten days or two weeks and during that time the intestate had traveled over them several times each day and during the evening of the accident he had passed over the pile of brick six or eight times in going to and coming from the fifth floor to the work bench. The intestate and his co-workers were enabled to go up and down from the fourth to the fifth floor by an ordinary ladder, put there by the employees of Schmidt [136]*136& Co.; the last that was seen of the intestate before the accident was when he was at the top of the ladder on the fifth floor. He was found dead at the bottom of the elevator well soon thereafter; no one saw him fall, and whether he slipped and fell from the ladder or slipped on the pile of brick and mortar on the fourth floor, no one knows; it is wholly a matter of speculation.

It clearly appears from the testimony taken upon the trial that the defendant in constructing the building and permitting the brick and mortar to remain on the floor and the elevator and stair openings to remain unguarded did not violate his contract or create a nuisance, or violate any rule of law.

There was no duty imposed by law or by contract on the defendant to prevent the employees of Schmidt & Oo. from climbing the ladder and walking over the floor upon which the brick were piled. The defendant was a mere contractor to do the mason work and had no control over the intestate and could not prevent the employees of Schmidt & Oo. from coming into the building and going where they pleased; they came there by permission of the owners and not by invitation of the defendant.

The defendant did not agree in its contract with the owners of the building to place guards around the elevator and stair openings and to keep the floors clear of brick and mortar and guard and protect the employees of Schmidt & Co. from accidents.

As between the Masonic Temple Association and the defendant, the obligation of the latter extended no further than to perform its part of the contract for the construction of the buildiug according to its terms with reasonable skill; it owed a duty to its employees to furnish them a reasonably safe place to work, but it owed no such duty to the employees of Schmidt & Oo. H the plan and construction of the building were such as to make it necessary and proper to erect guards around the elevator and stair openings to protect other independent contractors doing work in the buildiug, it was the duty of the Masonic Temple Association to have contracted with the defendant to take ’such [137]*137precautionary measures. In that event the duty of erecting guards would have devolved upon the defendant and it would have been liable- for all accidents arising from any neglect on its part to comply with the requirements of the contract. I am unable to see under what rule the defendant could be required to keep the place safe for the employees of Rudolph Schmidt & Co. to do their work, or to take measures to prevent persons from falling into openings in the building while in process of construction and necessary to be made in order to complete the building according to the terms of the contract. City of Buffalo v. Holloway, 7 N. Y. 493; Storrs v. City of Utica, 17 id. 109.

In Mayor v. Cunliff, 2 N. Y. 172, Judge Cady, in speaking for the court, said: “I have found no case in which a person had been held liable for negligence in the performance of any work, unless his negligence was in violation of a contract, express or implied, or of a duty which was imposed on him by law.”

In Larmore v. Crown Point Iron Co., 101 N. Y. 394, Judge Andrews said: “There is no negligence in a legal sense which can give a right of action, unless there is a violation of a legal duty to exercise care. The duty may exist as to some persons, and not as to others, depending upon peculiar relations and circumstances.”

Judge Parker, in discussing the question of negligence in Cosulich v. Standard O. Co., 122 N. Y. 126, said: “ The court failed to recognize a distinction, which had been carefully guarded by the courts of this state as well as by nearly all other jurisdictions in this country, between actions founded in negligence, where a contract relation existed between the parties, and those in which the defendant owed no other duty than to use such ordinary care and caution as the nature of his business demanded to avoid injury to others.”

The defendant had no right to intentionally injure the intestate and would be liable if it needlessly or carelessly injured him while performing its own work. It owed him a duty to abstain from creating a nuisance or a snare in [138]*138the building that might injure him, but it did not owe him the duty of active vigilence to see that he was not injured while engaged in doing Schmidt & Co.’s work.

It has been held that there is no negligence in a legal sense which can give a right of action unless there is a violation of a legal duty to exercise care. To establish a cause of action it must appear that the defendant owed some duty to the intestate which it has failed to discharge and that the neglect was the cause of the injury. Splittorf v. State of New York, 108 N. Y. 205.

I am unable to discover upon the evidence that any duty rested, on the defendant to keep, the floor clear of brick or to erect guards around the elevator or stair openings. The deceased at the time of the accident was in every legal sense a stranger to the defendant. There is no evidence in the case that the accident was caused by any negligence on the part of the defendant. It was using brick and mortar in the construction of the building and refuse would naturally accumulate on the floor. Hence, if the defendant can be held liable in this case,, it must be upon the naked ground that it is responsible for the careless acts of the intestate over whom it had no control. I know of no authority for imposing such a liability under such a state of facts.

It was held in Roulston v. Clark, 3 E. D.

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Related

Thaney v. A. Friederichs & Sons Co.
94 N.Y.S. 1165 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1905)

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Bluebook (online)
44 Misc. 134, 89 N.Y.S. 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thaney-v-a-friederick-sons-co-nysupct-1904.