190 A.D. 147 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1919
Lead Opinion
The claimant was first assistant engineer in the Department of the Commission of Highways, which was engaged in making preliminary surveys and maps for the construction under contract of a State highway along the cliffs of Storm King Mountain. Four engineers of the department, including the claimant, were directed to go to the site of the highway, locate its course, and mark its line upon the rocks. The claimant was given charge of the survey, but other duties required him to go immediately to Binghamton. After making this trip he met his fellow-engineers at Cornwall. Surveyors’ instruments, ropes and other needed articles had been forwarded to Cornwall, and with this duffel the party of four proceeded from Cornwall to Storm King. Two of the engineers stationed themselves with their instruments in such places that they could sight along the cliffs and give to claimant, who, with an engineer named Thompson, had climbed to the top of a ledge, the correct line along the rocks for him to mark. The cliffs at this point sheered off at a drop of 3 feet vertical to 1 horizontal. The claimant and Thompson had carried up three ropes, and selecting a rope 300 feet long they tied it to a tree near the edge of the cliff. The claimant lowered himself upon this rope, until, having come nearly to its end, he found himself upon a projecting shelf barely large enough to stand upon. Discovering that he was not down to the line sighted by the two engineers, he signaled to Thompson to send down another rope. Thompson picked out a rope 100 feet long, and lowered it to the claimant, who tied its end to a
Assuming that the claimant had a valid claim without the assistance of the enabling act, it was barred before that act was passed. (Code Civ. Proc. § 264.) If he had such a claim it was based upon the analogy of a cause of action in negligence arising between citizens. Such a cause of action would have been barred within three years (Code Civ. Proc. § 383, subd. 5), so that, if the enabling act provided no new cause of action, it was ineffective under the Constitution to give relief
While the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims independently of a special statute covers all private claims against the State, it is subject to this limitation: “In no case shall any liability be implied against the State, and no award shall be made on any claim against the State except upon such legal evidence as would establish liability against an individual or corporation in a court of law or equity.” (Code Civ. Proc. § 264.) In the application of this test to the claim now made, it will be seen that the solitary principle of the law obtaining in actions between citizens, capable of adaptation to the case of claimant, is that principle which makes a master liable to his servant for the violation of a duty owed to provide him with tools and appliances suitable and safe for his work. The successful application of this principle would depend upon the establishment of two propositions; first, that the relationship between this claimant and the State was the precise relationship of master and servant which the identical proof would establish were the party against whom the. claim is made an individual or corporation; second, if so, that the use of an unsound rope by the claimant servant was due to the neglect of the master State to provide tools and appliances which were suitable and safe.
It was said in Lewis v. State of New York (96 N. Y. 71) that the doctrine of respondeat superior was never applicable to the State, to make it liable for a tort committed by those in the public service. It was not made clear by the opinion in the case whether the non-applicability of the doctrine was due to the absence of the relationship of master and servant between the State and its officers, or to the incapacity of the State as a sovereign to be guilty of a wrong by imputation from the acts or omissions of officers considered as agents. The latter was the view taken in Litchfield v. Bond (186 N. Y. 66), where this language was quoted from Poindexter v. Greenhow (114 U. S. 270): “ It is also true, in respect to the State itself, that whatever wrong is attempted in its name is imputable to its government and not
Even if we assume that the relationship existed, nevertheless, the State as an employer did not fail in its duty of providing claimant with suitable and safe appliances. It has been held repeatedly that while the employer must furnish to his employees a suitable supply of ropes when ropes are needed, the selection of individual ropes to be used is a mere detail of the work, for which the employer is not responsible. In Ivers v. Minnesota Dock Co. (84 App. Div. 27) a foreman selected a rope from a sufficient and suitable supply for use upon a derrick. The rope was rotten or unsound at the end thereof, and broke, with the result that an employee wrs
The Legislature, although it may not make a gift of the moneys of the State, nor itself audit or allow a private claim against the State, may yet recognize and legalize private-claims, which, though unenforcible through the application of legal principles, are yet founded upon equity and .justice, and it may
All concur, John M. Kellogg, P. J., in separate memorandum, in which all concur, except Cochrane, J., dissenting on the ground that the claimant was negligent.
Concurrence Opinion
The enabling .act contemplates that the plaintiff shall not recover if the injury was due to his personal fault. He directed the other engineers to assemble the material on the job. His duties required his services elsewhere, and he was to meet them there, the material being selected by them. I do not think he was required to expect that competent engineers would bring rotten ropes for use in descending the precipice, but he had the right to assume that the material brought by them had been properly selected. The ordinary rules applicable to a negligence action are not present here. The plaintiff should be chargeable only with his own fault and not with the fault or neglect of others.
All concur, except Cochrane, J., dissenting on the ground that the claimant was negligent.
Judgment reversed upon the law and the facts and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event. The court disapproves of the sixth and seventh findings of fact.