29 N.Y. 591 | NY | 1864
There was not sufficient evidence of negligence on the part of the plaintiff to warrant the court to take the case from the jury. It did not appear that she had any reason to suppose the boards placed for people to walk over were not sufficient. On the contrary, she saw others passing, and, as it was usual to make such bridges to pass over excavations in the side-walks, she had no reason to suppose there was any difference in the present case. It is only where the negligence is clearly proved, that the court is warranted in dismissing the complaint. The defendant was one of a firm who had the contract for erecting the buildings. Both of the parties were alike guilty of negligence, and both might have been sued for such negligence, but each of them was equally liable, if any liability existed; and there is no rule which makes both parties necessary parties to an action of this character. There was a separate liability as well as a joint one, and *593 the plaintiff might, at his election, sue both or either of them. (14 John. 426.)
The principal question in the case is, whether the defendant was liable for the negligence of Brady, who had the contract to do the work and who made the excavations.
The cases of Blake v. Ferris (
In Storrs v. The City of Utica (
In Congreve v. Smith (
The judgment should be affirmed.
SELDEN, J. The verdict of the jury, under the appropriate charge of the court on the subject, is an answer to the position of the defendant's counsel that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence. If the question were an open one, however, it would be very difficult to find in the evidence anything to justify a different verdict. *595
There is no well-grounded reason for questioning the defendant's liability in this case, under the rule laid down in the case of Congreve v. Smith (
The fact chiefly relied upon in the defendant's behalf, that the injury resulted immediately from the negligence of a contractor, who was doing the work upon his own responsibility, and was bound by his contract with the defendant to guard, by proper precautions, against accidents, does not constitute a defense to the action. The excavation was made on the defendant's account and at his request, in a public street, for a private purpose of the defendant, in which the public had no interest, and, so far as the case discloses, without the consent of the corporate authorities. The act of making the excavation was wrongful, without reference to the manner in which it was made or secured. The defendant was, therefore, liable for the injury which the excavation produced to third persons, without fault on their part, whether the workmen were guilty of negligence or not. (Congreve v. Smith, supra; Dygert v. Schenck, 23 Wend. 446;Coupland v. Hardingham, 3 Campb. 398.) The basis of the defendant's liability is his own wrongful act in procuring the excavation to be made without authority, and not the negligence of the contractor or his workmen in performing or guarding the work. In this respect there is a plain distinction between the present case and those of Blake v. Ferris (1 Seld. 48);Pack v. The Mayor, c. (4 id. 222); and Kelly v. The *596 Mayor, c. (1 Kern. 432). In each of those cases the work was authorized by the corporate authorities, and was therefore rightful, if carefully and skilfully executed; and it was held that the defendants, not having any control over the manner in which it was done by the contractors, to whom its performance had been committed, was not responsible for their negligence or want of skill. If the work had been unauthorized, and was, therefore, in itself wrongful without reference to the manner in which it was performed, the defendants would undoubtedly have been held liable.
I do not think we are called upon to decide whether the defendant would have been liable for the negligence of the contractor in guarding the work, if it had been done by license from the corporate authorities, upon the ground of the distinction taken in the case of Storrs v. The City of Utica
(
The ground upon which I have placed the liability of the defendant, furnishes an answer to the objection, that his partner (Eberspacher) should also have been made a defendant. The making of the excavation without license, was a tort on the part of both the defendant and Eberspacher, and the liability for torts committed by more than one person is always several as well as joint. (Low v. Mumford, 14 John. 426.) I doubt whether the rule would be different if the liability of the defendant should be held to depend upon the negligence of the common agent of him and his partner. (Champion v. Bostwick, 18 Wend. 185-6.) It is, however, a sufficient answer to the objection under consideration, that it was not taken in the answer. (Code of Procedure, §§ 144, 147, 148;
All the judges concurring, judgment affirmed. *598