81 N.Y.S. 400 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
This action was brought to recover damages for injuries sustained by the infant plaintiff in a hallway of premises Ho. 159 Orchard street in the city of. Hew York, which premises belonged to the defendant. It is alleged in the complaint that the defendant wrongfully, carelessly and negligently allowed a heavy iron railing to remain in a dangerous position against a wall in the hallway of the premises, and that while the infant plaintiff was passing through the hallway this railing fell upon and seriously injured him. It is further alleged that the iron railing remained in the hallway for about four days and that it was an unlawful and dangerous obstruc
The following facts are established by the evidence: The defendant was the owner of the premises in question; the building was a tenement house, and the infant plaintiff, four years of age, resided with his parents, who were tenants of one of the apartments in the house. The defendant contracted to have certain alterations made in the front of the building, and entered into an agreement with a builder to make the alterations in accordance with specifications agreed upon. These alterations seem, from the terms of the specifications, to have included the putting in of show windows for store purposes in the front basement, and that required the removal of brick work and the taking down of part of a fire escape on the front of the building. One Polstein was the contractor for making the alterations, and he sublet the iron work to the firm of Ravitch Brothers, who were to remove the fire escape, or so much thereof as was necessary. Ravitch Brothers undertook the work, which was
The defendant had no control over the contractor, sub-contractor, or the workmen of either, He in no way interfered with the work, gave no directions in regard thereto, but left it completely with the contractor. It does not appear that the work to be done was in itself dangerous to occupants of rooms in the house. Some of the tenants, including the father of the infant plaintiff, remained in the premises while the alterations were going on. The injuries sustained by the plaintiff were the consequence of the iron obstruction falling . upon him late in the afternoon of the same day on which it was placed in the hallway, and at that time the plaintiff was rightfully in such hallway.
That the negligence which resulted in injury to the infant plain-? tiff was that of an independent contractor is' established. This obstruction was not placed in the hallway by the defendant or by his servants. There was no interference by him or them with the work the contractor ivas employed to do; what was contracted for was lawful; what was to be done Under the contract was not of such a character as devolved upon the owner the performance of an affirmative duty to his tenants occupying rooms, and which he could not delegate to a contractor. That contractor had no right or authority or power to interfere with the hallway or to obstruct it. The use of - the hallway is not shown to have been necessary to the work, which work was not of a kind that involved danger to those who should use the hallways. ■ The contract did not include any alteration of the hallways, or authorize their use as a place of deposit for material by the contractor. Those who placed the obstruction in the hallway were not in the employ of the defendant, but of the contractor or sub-contractor ; and the defendant cannot be made liable for the consequences of the wanton or careless act of a person not in his employ. (Martin v. Pettit, 117 N. Y. 118.) Nor can the defendant be held liable upon the theory that he neglected a
It is claimed, however, that the case should not be considered as one of negligence only, but that the allegations of the complaint are broad enough to charge the defendant with maintaining a nuisance in a hallway, a common appurtenance of' a tenement house, and that the proof establishes that a nuisance was maintained by the landlord. It is evident that this obstruction was not created in the hallway by the owner, or by his servants or agents, but was the wrongful act of a third party. If it were a nuisance, it was created by the servants or employees of the independent contractor. It was not the result of the ordinary method of doing work intrusted to an independent contractor, but was caused by the negligence of the contractor or his servants and was in a matter purely collateral to the contract, viz., depositing materials, and the case comes within the distinction referred to by Gray, Oh. J., in Gorham v. Gross (125 Mass. 232, 240).
On reading the whole evidence, we do not find it sufficient to establish that the owner maintained or suffered a nuisance to continue, and so failed in his duty to tenants, and in the view we have taken of this case it is unnecessary to consider whether the defendant had a janitor in the premises when the accident occurred.
'The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Yah Brunt, P. J., O’Brien, Ingraham and Hatch, JJ., concurred.
Judgment, and order affirmed, with costs.