88 N.Y.S. 289 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
The facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion of Mr. Justice Ingraham. All that it is necessary for us to do is to express our views with reference to the obligation, if any, which rested on the defendants or either of them, of seeing to it that the' plaintiff in entering the building was not injured as the result of their neglect or careless conduct.
With respect to the mortgage company, it being the owner of the building and there being evidence from which the inference could be drawn that it employed the brokers to obtain tenants and authorized them to enter the building with customers for the purpose of showing the rooms, the principle of respondeat superior
That contention proceeds upon the theory that the action against, the mortgage company individually was commenced by the service upon it of the amended summons and complaint and not by the original service upon it, and hence the amendment brought into the action a new party defendant. The cases relied upon are Shaw v. Cock (78 N. Y. 194), and Abbott v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co. (120 id. 652). In both of those cases, however, it appears that another and distinct corporation had by amendment been made a party. In the former “Butterfield’s Overland Dispatch” was brought in by service upon Cock as its treasurer, whereas the original service was upon several individual defendants, including Cock and the “ Overland Dispatch Company,” another joint stock company. Although it was intended to serve the first-mentioned company, against which the plaintiff had a cause of action, the service was made upon other persons, and, therefore, the amended summons brought in a new defendant. Similarly in the Abbott Case (supra) the action was originally brought against Jewett, as receiver of the Erie Railway Company, and the amendment brought in the “New York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad Company,” and in the opinion it was said that it “ was a stranger and a new corporation organized by the purchasers upon the foreclosure sale of the franchise, property and assets of the former company,” and that “ Of course the order could not change ,the date of the service of the summons and complaint so as to deprive the New York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad Company of the right to avail itself of the Statute of Limitations.”
In the case at bar no new corporation or person was by the amendment brought in, the only change being in the designation of the defendant company by striking out the words “ as substituted trustee under the will of Matthew Byrnes, deceased.” It was not desired to bring in any other person or corporation. The amend
Here it is the same corporation, the United States Mortgage and Trust Company, which it is sought to hold, upon which service was made and which appeared, and striking out the words “ as substituted trustee,” etc., did not bring in any new company or individual that had not been served nor was there substituted a new cause of action. The argument that a judgment against the company as trustee would not be binding upon it individually is not determinative. The same might be said in the Courier Case (supra), where the company was sued as a corporation,, that the unincorporated association would not be bound by a judgment entered in the action if continued without the amendment. Nor in the Tighe Case (supra) would the defendant have been individually liable upon a judgment entered if the action had proceeded against her as an administratrix. It is that very fact which makes the amendment necessary, but the result of the amendment was not to bring in a new party. What is controlling in each case is whether or not a new party, that is, a new person or corporation, is, by the amendment, made a defendant. Here the mortgage company was served originally and nothing was gained so far as having it before the court by the new service, but for the proper entry of the judgment against it the designation was upon motion changed by striking out the words “as substituted trustee,” etc. It follows that, as it was not subsequently brought in, the Statute of Limitations would not constitute a bar to the maintenance of the action against it.
With respect to the liability of the brokers, they too, we think, cannot escape responsibility if, as the result of their careless or negligent conduct, they were the direct cause of the plaintiff’s injury.
The difficulty, however, in voting to affirm the judgment as against the mortgage company and to reverse the dismissal of the complaint as against the brokers arises from the meagreness of proof upon the question of negligence. There is nothing to show just how the injuries were caused. Whether the plaintiff was conducted
From all that appears she may have fallen for some cause with' which, the defendants had nothing to do. If it appeared that,in going from the hallway she was led into a dark room and fell through some dangerous place or opening of which the defendants were or should have been aware, then there might be force in the suggestion that the principle of res ipso loquitur applies. The extent of her testimony, however, is that after crossing the threshold she made a slight movement to pérmit the agent to pass and immediately fell but did not know the distance, adding, upon being. asked if she fell from one floor to another, “ Of course when you go unexpectedly into space you don’t know anything.” She further testified she supposed there was an elevator shaft or an unfinished stairway but was too ill to investigate and could not describe at all what sort of hole or trap or shaft she fell into; that the floor of the hallway was perfectly firm and she didn’t expect to be precipitated into space. She states that her greatest injuries were to her left side and she suffered for weeks and at the time of the accident she had great pain and bled copiously but was not rendered unconscious.
This testimony is insufficient in failing to state definitely that the plaintiff after going into the dark room was precipitated any distance or fell through an opening or a dangerous place. It may be that such is a fair inference, but from an inference thus drawn we cannot make the further inference that the defendants or either of them were negligent. In other words, the law does not permit the building up of inference upon inference because that would lead to speculation instead of reasonable certainty. Here there is an absence of any certainty as to whether the plaintiff fell on the floor
Her description of the accident and her inability to state with any precision the cause of her injuries does not warrant the application of the principle of res ipsa loquitur. We think, therefore, that there was insufficient proof upon which to support the charge of negligence and hence that the motion to dismiss the complaint both as to the mortgage company and as to the brokers for failure to show a cause of action should have been granted.
We think that the judgment against the mortgage company and the order denying motion for a new trial should be reversed and a . new trial ordered, with costs to the company to abide the event; and that the judgment of dismissal as to the brokers should be affirmed, with costs.
Hatch and Laughlin, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., and Ingraham, J., dissented in part.
(dissenting in part):
This action was originally brought against the United States Mortgage and Trust Company, as substituted trustee under the will of Matthew Byrnes, deceased, and William Z. Greene and Louis R. Taylor, doing business under the name of Greene & Taylor, to recover from the defendants the damages sustained by. the plaintiff in consequence of their negligence in allowing an apartment house to remain in an unsafe and dangerous condition, by reason of which the plaintiff sustained injuries. The United States Mortgage and Trust Company, as substituted trustee under the will of Matthew Byrnes, deceased, and the defendants Greene and Taylor interposed separate answers in the month of October, 1900, and the ease was noticed for trial and placed on the calendar. In May, 1903, the plaintiff made an application at Special Term to amend the summons and complaint by striking therefrom the words, “ as substituted trustee under the will of Matthew Byrnes, deceased,” after
The plaintiff served upon the defendants an amended summons and complaint, wherein the United States Mortgage and Trust Company was sued individually, instead of as substituted trustee under the will of Matthew Byrnes, deceased. To this amended summons and complaint the defendant United States Mortgage anTrust Company interposed its individual answer, which, as a separate defense, alleged that the cause of action did not accrue at any time within three years next- before the commencement of the action against it. Upon the trial, the defendant trust company insisted that the action as against it individually was commenced by thé service upon it of the amended summons and complaint, and as the cause of action therein alleged accrued more than three years prior to the service of the amended summons and complaint, it was barred by the Statute of Limitations.
By the original complaint, the action was brought against the trustee under the will of Matthew Byrnes, deceased. Mo judg
The case of Shaw v. Cock (78 N. Y. 194) is a direct authority in support of this conclusion. That action was originally brought against one George E. Cock and seven other individuals named, and
If we are right, in this conclusion:, then the action against the United States' Mortgage and Trust Company wás commenced by the service upon it of the amended summons and complaint, and it follows that the cause of action was barred by the Statute of Limita-, tians and that the complaint should have been dismissed. And as. this result' could not be changed upon another trial, the judgment against the' trust', company should be reversed and the complaint dismissed, with costs. '
The plaintiff also joined , as defendants William Z. Greene and Louis R. Taylor, composing the firm of Greene & Taylor, and the complaint ..charges them .with negligence, from which the injuries to the plaintiff resulted. At the end of plaintiff’s case, on motion of counsel for Greene & Taylor, the complaint was dismissed as to them, and the plaintiff appeals from that dismissal.
There were no assurances given by Greene & Taylor as to the condition of the building. An employee of Greene & Taylor and the plaintiff entered an unfinished building; the employee directed the plaintiff to go into a dark room, and when in that room she fell. There is no evidence to show what caused her to fall. Whether there was.a stairway or an elevator shaft, or a portion of the building which had not been covered with the floor, does not appear; nothing to show that the room into which the plaintiff stepped was unfinished or in an unsafe condition. Neither of the defendants was then in actual possession of the building, as the evidence is that it was turned over to the trust company by the contractor in February, 1900, some months after the accident, and neither of the defendants, therefore, was responsible for the condition of the building. The plaintiff was undoubtedly invited by Greene & Taylor to inspect the building, but it was to inspect an uncompleted building in the possession of contractors and over which neither of the. defendants exercised control. There was no representation, express or implied, that the building Was safe to inspect, or that a person who voluntarily entered it for the purpose of inspection would find it in a safe condition. It is true that this employee of Greene & Taylor invited the plaintiff to go in through a doorway into a dark room; but there is no evidence to show that the room was not finished and in a safe condition. I cannot see that Greene & Taylor assumed any responsibility for the condition of this room, or that there was an implied representation that there was no stairway or other opening in the room through which a person could fall.
The judgment so far as it dismisses the complaint as to the defendants Greene & Taylor should be affirmed, with costs; and the judgment so far as appealed from by the defendant United States Mortgage and Trust Company should be reversed and the complaint dismissed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., concurred.
Judgment against the mortgage company and order reversed, and new trial ordered, with costs to the company appellant to abide event; and judgment as to other defendants affirmed, with costs.
Code Proc. § 173, now Code Civ. Proc. § 723.—[Rep.,