Viera v. Uniroyal, Inc.

142 Misc. 2d 1099, 541 N.Y.S.2d 668, 1988 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 845
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 142 Misc. 2d 1099 (Viera v. Uniroyal, 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
Viera v. Uniroyal, Inc., 142 Misc. 2d 1099, 541 N.Y.S.2d 668, 1988 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 845 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Martin B. Stecher, J.

These motions and cross motions present us with new turns in the tortuous road on which choice of tort law has embarked since simple, straightforward lex loci delictus ceased to be our sole guide (Babcock v Jackson, 12 NY2d 473).

THE FACTS

The relevant facts were stipulated. On June 9, 1979, plaintiff Omar Viera, a New York domiciliary, fell from a scaffold while helping to clear a factory in Kennett, Missouri, of smoke damage. The plant was leased to the defendant Uniroyal which engaged the cleaning services of defendant Crystal Home Cleaners of L.I., Inc. (hereafter Crystal). Uniroyal is a New Jersey corporation whose "principal place of business and World Headquarters” are in Connecticut. It has an office in New York County as well as a plant in Missouri (and as suggested by the stipulation, places of business throughout the world).

Crystal is a New York corporation domiciled here. Its written contract with Uniroyal was prepared by Uniroyal in Connecticut, "mailed to Crystal in New York and was thereafter accepted by Uniroyal in Connecticut.” Crystal subcontracted the smoke clearance to third-party defendant AFP Commercial and Home Cleaners, Inc. (hereafter AFP), a New York corporation domiciled in New York. AFP is plaintiff Viera’s employer. Crystal also engaged Baker Rentals of Paragould, Arkansas, to supply an unassembled scaffold to the work site; and engaged Armando Romanelli and Alberto Quintero doing business as A A Cleaners of New York to erect the scaffold. (AA Cleaners is, in all likelihood, a New York enterprise.) The Crystal contracts with Uniroyal and all of Crystal’s subcontracts were to be performed exclusively in Missouri.

[1102]*1102THE MOTIONS

Uniroyal moves for partial summary judgment (CPLR 3212) dismissing the first and second causes of action to the extent they seek recovery from Uniroyal. The first cause of action invokes the statutory, nondelegable duty imposed by New York Labor Law § 240 on "contractors and owners” where scaffolds are used. The second cause of action is premised on the nondelegable duty imposed by New York Labor Law § 241 (presumably, subd [6]) on owners and contractors to provide a safe workplace to those engaged in "construction, excavation or demolition work”. (We need not, for the purposes of this motion, determine whether Viera was engaged in "construction, excavation or demolition” [but see, Jaroszewicz v Facilities Dev. Corp., 115 AD2d 159, 160].)

Crystal, although serving no notice of cross motion, "joins” in Uniroyal’s motion and seeks dismissal of these first two causes against Uniroyal and Crystal. The failure to serve a notice of cross motion is not necessarily fatal (Plateis v Flax, 54 AD2d 813) and Crystal’s application is considered on its merits.

Crystal, the New York contractor, cross-moves for a default judgment (CPLR 3215) against Romanelli and Quintero, the New York scaffold erectors, for failure to answer the second third-party complaint.

AFP, the New York cleaning subcontractors and Viera’s employer, cross-moves to dismiss the third-party complaint on the ground that under Missouri law the third-party action does not lie against an employer where "both employer and employee have elected to accept the provisions of’ Missouri’s workers’ compensation law.

UNIROYAL’S MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT

We start with the proposition that the law of the State in which the tort was committed is the applicable law "to be rejected only when it is evident that the situs of the accident is the least of the several factors or influences to which the accident may be attributed” (Neumeier v Kuehner, 31 NY2d 121, 131 [concurring opn, Breitel, J.]). It has been said in a case where the plaintiffs and defendant were New Jersey domiciliaries and the locus and forum were in New York (Schultz v Boy Scouts, 65 NY2d 189, 198) that "the relative interests of the domicile and locus jurisdictions in having their laws apply will depend on the particular tort issue in [1103]*1103conflict in the case. Thus, when the conflicting rules involve the appropriate standard of conduct * * * the law of the place of the tort 'will usually have a predominate, if not exclusive, concern’ * * * because [of] the locus jurisdiction’s interests in protecting the reasonable expectations of the parties who relied on it to govern their primary conduct * * *. Conversely, when the jurisdictions’ conflicting rules relate to allocating losses that result from admittedly tortious conduct * * * considerations of the State’s admonitory interest and party reliance are less important.” It has also been held that where plaintiff and defendant are domiciled in different States, as, for instance, a plaintiff passenger and defendant driver, we apply the rule of the locus State unless " 'it can be shown that displacing that normally applicable rule will advance the relevant substantive law purpose without impairing the smooth working of the multi-state system or producing great uncertainty for litigants’ ” (Neumeier v Kuehner, supra, at 128).

In my judgment to apply New York law to the dispute between the plaintiff and Uniroyal will "impair the smooth working of the multistate system”. Labor Law § 240 has two purposes: to provide safety standards for scaffolds and other elevated places of work and to impose the nondelegable safety duty on "contractors and owners”. Similarly, Labor Law § 241 (6) imposes on owners and contractors the nondelegable duty to provide a safe workplace for those engaged in construction, demolition or excavation.

It is not necessary, for the purposes of resolving Uniroyal’s motion, to call these statutes solely "loss allocating” or solely "conduct directing”; for the choice of law issue, as between Viera and Uniroyal, is determined by the absence of a common domicile. Not only are they domiciled in separate States, but the domicile of neither is the place of the tort. There is no greater reason to impose New York law on the dispute between these two litigants than there is to impose the law of Connecticut, Uniroyal’s domicile. Indeed, Uniroyal, having a situs in, and therefore being subject to the jurisdiction of, many States, deviation from the doctrine of lex loci delictus would permit any plaintiff suing Uniroyal to choose the forum, whose law is most hospitable to his claims. Where a defendant is subject to the jurisdiction of many States, forum shopping is best discouraged by applying both the loss-allocating and the standard-of-conduct law of the place of the tort (see, Schultz v Boy Scouts, supra, at 201).

[1104]*1104Accordingly, Uniroyal’s motion to dismiss the first and second causes of action to the extent pleaded against Uniroyal is granted, for New York’s Labor Law is inapplicable to their dispute. The law of Missouri, the place of the tort, will govern.

CRYSTAL’S CROSS MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT

It is to be observed at the outset that there is no necessity to apply laws uniformly to all litigants in a single case where choice of law issues are involved (see, e.g., Babcock v Jackson, supra, at 484; Schultz v Boy Scouts, supra, at 197; Boxer v Gottlieb, 652 F Supp 1056, 1062). The same analytical approach to differently situated litigants may yield very different results.

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Bluebook (online)
142 Misc. 2d 1099, 541 N.Y.S.2d 668, 1988 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/viera-v-uniroyal-inc-nysupct-1988.