171 N.E. 754 | NY | 1930
Plaintiff, a servant of the Otis Elevator Company, was installing an elevator in a building then in course of construction. Beside the elevator well was a shaft for a stairway. The shaft was not visible, however, on the ground floor where the plaintiff was at work, except by lifting up one's eyes and looking to the floors above. There was nothing to mark its presence to the casual observer. Far up in the shaft, on the tenth or eleventh floor, masons, working on a scaffold, were using tiles and bricks. One of the bricks, falling from the scaffold, struck the plaintiff on the head while he stood beneath the shaft, intent upon his work. In this action for damages, two defendants have been joined. One, La Sala Brothers, Incorporated, a subcontractor for the mason work, was the employer of the bricklayers. The other, Omaha Realty Company, Incorporated, the owner of the building, was in substance a general contractor, maintaining general supervision through a superintendent on the scene. Evidence was excluded that bricks had fallen down the shaftway on previous occasions. Evidence was excluded also that protective devices such as screens or warning signs were customary safeguards. *494 There was a verdict against the subcontractor, and a dismissal of the complaint against the owner. From the affirmance of the dismissal, this appeal has been allowed.
We think the owner of the building, acting as general contractor, was under a duty to the plaintiff to use reasonable care in maintaining the approaches to the elevator in a condition of reasonable safety, and is answerable in damages if the duty was ignored. Liability is not defeated by the fact that the plaintiff was a servant of a subcontractor, and not a servant of the owner. He had come into the building in furtherance of the owner's business, and was using ways and approaches necessary or suitable to enable him to go forward with his work. In such circumstances the duty of protection is independent of the relation of servant and employer. This was so at common law (Coughtry v. Globe Woolen Co.,
We are not unmindful of the fact that dangers must often be tolerated in a building in process of erection, though needless and so intolerable if permitted in the finished structure. Very often they are obvious, and, if not obvious, inevitable. In the striving after safety, owner or contractor is not required to go beyond the bounds of what is practicable and reasonable (Murphy
v. Altman,
We think there was error in the dismissal of the complaint. We think there was error also in the exclusion of testimony affecting the measure of the risk and the means available to avoid it.
The judgment of the Appellate Division and that of the Trial Term should be reversed and a new trial granted with costs to abide the event.
POUND, CRANE, KELLOGG, O'BRIEN and HUBBS, JJ., concur; LEHMAN, J., not sitting.
Judgments reversed, etc. *496