OPINION OF THE COURT
On December 15, 1994, plaintiff Zachary Balthazar, a plumber, fell from an allegedly defective ladder while installing a fire sprinkler system in a building owned by defendant Richard Levine. Levine was also the president of Capitol Fire Sprinkler Co., Inc., the company which employed Balthazar. Capitol was the lessee occupying the half of the building where Balthazar was working. He fell because the base of the ladder allegedly had no rubber safety shoes to provide traction and prevent the ladder from slipping.
At issue on this appeal is the motion court’s grant of partial summary judgment to plaintiffs as to liability under section 240 (1). Full Circle contends that it should not be held liable as a general contractor because it was not a general contractor, but a construction manager, and had no responsibility for the sprinkler work. Furthermore, all defendants argue that Balthazar should be barred from recovery as a “recalcitrant worker,” based on his alleged failure to follow instructions to use only Capitol’s equipment. Full Circle and Capitol each assert that the defective ladder belonged to the other party. Because of this dispute over ownership, the motion court denied Full Circle’s cross motion for summary judgment on its claim for indemnification from Capitol.
Summary judgment on liability should have been denied as against Full Circle because issues of fact exist as to its role, if any, in the sprinkler project. Where a party had no authority to supervise or control the activity that caused the plaintiffs injury, that party may not be held liable (Filchuk v Lehrer McGovern Bovis Constr.,
The terms “general contractor” and “construction manager” are not synonymous. As construction manager, under an American Institute of Architects form contract, which is different from that for a general contractor, Full Circle worked with the architect to plan the renovations, hired subcontractors, obtained bids and work permits, and supervised the subcontractors’ work. Although Full Circle was required to review the subcontractors’ safety programs, the contract was specific that “[t]he Construction Manager’s responsibilities for coordination of safety programs shall not extend to direct control over or charge of the acts or omissions” of persons other than Full Circle’s own employees.
According to Full Circle, the fire sprinkler work was entirely extrinsic to its contract with Capitol, and was not included in
Levine testified at his deposition that Full Circle “[took] care of everything except the fire sprinkler installation.” Significantly, Full Circle obtained the work permits for all of the other contractors’ work, but not for Capitol’s sprinkler work. He claimed that Full Circle coordinated with Capitol as to the installation of the sprinklers, though Capitol supervised the work. Moreover, Levine agreed that the design of the sprinkler work was separate from the plans prepared by Full Circle for the other renovations. Because of these factual questions about Full Circle’s responsibilities, the grant of summary judgment to plaintiffs as against Full Circle should be reversed.
The motion court properly determined that the recalcitrant worker defense did not apply. A Labor Law § 240 (1) claim will be dismissed where the plaintiff disobeyed an “immediate and active direction” not to use a particular unsafe piece of equipment, and refused to use adequate safety devices when such were provided (Jastrzebski v North Shore School Dist.,
To the extent that a contractor’s liability is based on the statute rather than on fault, it is entitled to common-law indemnification from the subcontractor whose negligence caused the accident (Leon v Peppe Realty Corp.,
Mazzarelli, Ellerin, Rubin and Andrias, JJ., concur.
Order, Supreme Court, New York County, entered January 11, 1999, modified, on the law, to deny plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment as against Full Circle, and otherwise affirmed, without costs.
