80 A.D.2d 989 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1981
Order unanimously affirmed, with costs. Memorandum: For the reasons stated in its memorandum decision, Special Term properly denied defendants’ motions for summary judgment. In doing so, however, the court declined to resolve an issue which was presented on defendants Vitales’ motion addressed to plaintiff Ackley’s cause of action under subdivision 6 of section 241 of the Labor Law. It was essential that the issue of the applicability of section 241 to be addressed because if it does not apply, defendants Vitale were entitled to summary judgment dismissing Ackley’s separately stated cause of action. The primary actions in these cases are for the alleged wrongful deaths on April 18, 1975 of three employees of the International Salt Company. They died as the result of an explosion of gases in a long-abandoned salt mine owned by that company. The mine had a vertical shaft which reached a depth of 1,100 feet to the salt beds below. Water, infiltrating the shaft, became saline and eventually polluted a stream flowing into the Genesee River. In November, 1974 the Department of Environmental Conservation ordered the salt company to remedy the condition and directed the company to retain a professional engineer and to submit engineering reports to the department. A plan was devised by the salt company to construct a plug at the base of the shaft but the plan was rejected by its retained engineers, defendant Heen & Flint Associates, because the plug would not be impervious to water. Thereafter, Heen & Flint submitted a document to the salt company entitled “Preliminary Specification for the Elimination of Ground Water Infiltration into the Mine at Cuylerville”. The document described a plan by which wooden bulkheads obstructing the shaft at the 620-foot level would be dislodged and forced to the bottom of the shaft by dropping large boulders down the shaft; a plug would be created from the presence of the large boulders at the bottom, over which were to be placed succeeding layers of progressively smaller stones followed by layers of gravel and sand and covered by impervious clay. The purpose of the plan was to restrain infiltrating water from reaching the salt below. Defendant Vitale Bros. Contractors, Inc., was hired to furnish labor, materials and equipment to perform the work as per the specifications of defendant Heen & Flint. On the first day of work on the construction of the plug, an electric lamp was lowered into the