152 Misc. 716 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1934
This action is brought by the plaintiff against the defendant to recover damages from it by reason of certain acts set forth in the plaintiff’s complaint.
The complaint of the plaintiff contains six alleged causes of action, to wit, negligence, nuisance, breach of contract, fraud, violation of statute, misfeasance of the defendant.
The allegation of negligence sets forth the fact that the relation of master and servant existed between the plaintiff and this defendant; that the plaintiff worked for the defendant, and that by reason of the failure of the defendant to provide him a safe place to work, safe tools and appliances, and reasonable regulations, this plaintiff suffered injury. Damages are sought against the defendant for that injury. No attack is made upon this alleged cause of action.
The defendant, however, is now moving against the other causes of action set forth in the plaintiff’s complaint, upon the ground that they do not allege facts sufficient to constitute the causes of action sought to be alleged, and, in the alternative, that certain causes of action should be set aside on the ground they are redundant repetitious, unnecessary and immaterial.
The pleader in the second cause of action has attempted to set forth a cause of action based upon a nuisance. The plaintiff was employed to work for the defendant at its factory, and the alleged acts by which this plaintiff seeks to recover damages against the defendant were acts arising out of the employment of the plaintiff by the defendant, and were within the buildings owned or operated by the defendant.
There are two forms of nuisance, private and public. A private nuisance has been defined by Blackstone as “ anything done to the hurt or annoyance of the lands, tenements and hereditaments of another.” (3 Black. Comm. 215.) Mr. Cooley, in the third edition of his work on Torts, volume 2, page 1174, enlarges upon this definition as follows: “ By hurt or annoyance here is meant, not a physical injury necessarily, but an injury to the owner or possessor thereof, as respects his dealing with, possessing or enjoying them.”
This rule has been adopted and applied by the courts of this State. (Kavanagh v. Barber, 131 N. Y. 211; Heeg v. Licht, 80 id. 579.)
There is no claim made in this action that this plaintiff either owned the property in which he worked or had any right to possession of any part thereof. He was simply an employee of the defendant.
In the case of Kavanagh v. Barber (supra) the court held that there was sufficient evidence to justify the jury in finding that certain fumes from the defendant’s manufacturing establishment
The same doctrine was held in the case of Hughes v. City of Auburn (161 N. Y. 96).
Plaintiff’s injuries are alleged to have occurred on the same premises where the nuisance is alleged to have existed. A private nuisance involves the existence on one property of a dangerous condition which is a hazard or annoyance to another property.
A nuisance is public only when it hazards or annoys the public-at-large or a large number of the public as distinguished from a determinate number of persons. (People v. Transit Development Company, 131 App. Div. 174.)
It becomes actionable in a civil action for damages only when a member of the public-at-large, so hazarded, receives some special damage. (Close v. Whitbeck, 126 App. Div. 544.)
The plaintiff herein makes no allegation that the defendant’s plant was a public place, nor that the hazard of the nuisance on defendant’s property extended to a public street or place, nor that the plaintiff was exposed to the hazard of a nuisance as a member of the public-at-large.
An employer’s liability for injury to bis employees by reason of a dangerous condition upon the premises is founded on negligence, and results from the violation of the employer’s duty to provide his employees with a reasonably safe place in which to work.
The cases are practically uniform that actions for nuisance, either public or private, must be justified only on the one theory or the other; that is to say, in the cases which have proceeded upon the theory of nuisance, the plaintiff either had a property right in premises adjoining the property on which the nuisance existed, or the plaintiff was a member of the public-at-large, and was injured by reason of a nuisance which was a hazard to the public. No authority in this State has been submitted to me in which an action for a nuisance has been brought by an employee against an employer for alleged acts of the employer committed within the confines of his plant. This cause of action cannot be sustained.
Among the implied obligations resting upon the master are the following:
1. That he shall provide suitable means and appliances to enable the servant to do his work as safely as the hazards incident to the employment will permit. (Fuller v. Jewett, 80 N. Y. 46.)
2. That he will provide a suitable and reasonably safe place for the doing of the work to be performed by the servant. (Flike v. Boston & Albany R. R. Co., 53 N. Y. 549.)-
3. Providing of other servants when the circumstances require it, sufficient in number and reasonably skillful and competent for the performance of the service so that the servant may not be exposed to unnecessary risk or peril from unskillful or incompetent workmen or servants, or from a lack of a sufficient number of them. (Flike v. Boston & Albany R. R. Co., supra.)
While the master may make a contract with his employee affecting many of the terms of his employment, which contract, if based upon a valuable consideration, will be legal and binding upon the parties thereto, still the master cannot make a contract with Ms employee that will in any wise reduce Ms liability to Ms employee either granted by statute or by the common law. TMs would be against public policy. (Johnston v. Fargo, 184 N. Y. 379; note, 7 L. R. A. [N. S.] 537.)
The action for breach of the promise of the master is an action in tort for the negligence and not on the promise. (Obanhein v. Arbuckle, 80 App. Div. 465.)
In that case the employee was injured from the use of a defective saw. That the foreman of the employer assured Mm that new
39 Corpus Juris, page 259, states the rule as follows: “ Except insofar as the common law rules have been modified by statute, the master is, where the relation of master and servant exists, liable to the servant for personal injuries sustained by him and which have been incurred by him while he is within the course and scope of bis employment by reason of the master’s negligence, except insofar as his liability may be affected by the application of the doctrines of assumed risk, contributory negligence, and of fellow servant. Negligence upon the part of the master is essential to his liability at common law for an injury sustained by the servant. The employer is not an insurer of the employee’s safety. He is hable for the consequences of his negligence, but not of the dangers of the employment, * * * The duty of the master arises by operation of law from the relation of master and servant, and not out of the contract of employment. No contract will be implied from the contract of hiring whereby the employer agrees to take due and ordinary care not to expose the servant to extraordinary risk and danger in the course of his employment.”
It may be pointed out that in this cause of action the pleader alleges only that the' employer agreed to furnish to the employee in his work those particular requirements laid down by statute or common law, and does not claim in any form a waiver or a release of any of the employer’s duties.
Given the fullest effect to all the allegations in this alleged cause of action they do not make a cause of action against the defendant.
In the plaintiff’s fourth alleged cause of action the pleader attempts to plead fraud by alleging that the master made certain representations to the employee regarding its plant and factory being a safe place in which to work; that said representations were false and untrue, and were so known to be false and untrue by the employer; and that they were made with intent to defraud and deceive this plaintiff, and he is seeking to recover damages therefor against the defendant.
Much that has been said heretofore applies to this cause of action. No case has been submitted to me which either directly or indirectly supports a cause of action upon any such theory as this, and I believe it to be insufficient. No matter how many purported causes of action are included in one complaint, if the real basis of liability is negligence, there is but a negligence cause of action stated. (Payne v. New York., Susq. & W. R. R. Co., 201 N. Y. 436.)
The pleader in the fifth cause of action sets forth that the defendant violated the terms of the Labor Law, and by reason of that fact he is entitled to recover damages against this defendant. In Koester v. Rochester Candy Works (194 N. Y. 92) the court says: “ The Labor Law makes a violation of its provisions a misdemeanor, but does not give a civil remedy therefor to the party injured.”
A violation of the provisions of the Labor Law has been held evidence of negligence, if not negligence per se. [Weisthal v. Arena Building Corp., 232 App. Div. 694; affd., 257 N. Y. 537; Marino v. Lehmaier, 173 id. 530; Karpeles v. Heine, 227 id. 74, 79; Koester v. Rochester Candy Works, 194 id. 92.)
An examination of the plaintiff’s complaint will disclose that the pleader in great detail has pleaded in his first cause of action, to wit, negligence, definite and specific violations of the Labor Law. The fifth separate cause of action adds nothing more to the pleading than is contained in the first alleged cause of action set forth in the plaintiff’s complaint. If upon the trial of the action the plaintiff is able to prove a violation of the Labor Law there will be at least some evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant. In this case there is one primary wrong and one liability. (Payne v. New York, Susq. & W. R. R. Co., 201 N. Y. 436.)
This alleged cause of action is immaterial unnecessary, redundant and repetitious.
All of these acts charge a wrong. A wrong is either ex contractu' or ex delicto.
“ In its most usual sense wrong signifies an injury committed to the person or property of another, or to his relative rights unconnected with contract; and these wrongs are committed with or without force. But in a more extended signification, wrong includes the violation of a contract; a failure by a man to perform his undertaking or promise is a wrong or injury to him to whom it was made.” (Baldwin, Century Edition of Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, under the heading, “ Wrong.”)
Wrongs are either public or private, and are further discussed in Moak’s Underhill on Torts (1st Am. ed.), at pages 3 and 4.
The gravamen of the various claims of the plaintiff is not based upon contract. Therefore, it must be based upon a tort, a wrong, or, in other words, negligence. The pleader states that the defendant was guilty of misfeasance. Misfeasance is the performance of an act in an improper manner. Nonfeasance is the failure to perform an act- Either one or both together may be negligence.
Negligence is defined in Bouvier (p. 839) as follows: “ The failure to do what a reasonable and prudent person would ordinarily have done under the circumstances of the situation, or the doing what such a person under the existing circumstances would not have done.”
The defendant’s failure to comply with the requirements of the statute are set forth in detail as a separate cause of action, and personal injuries are claimed through the misfeasance of the defendant and not nonfeasance or negligence. If this cause of action is founded on nuisance it is insufficient for the reasons already stated. If it is founded on the violation of a statute it is repetitious and is fully covered by the other allegations in the plaintiff’s complaint. It adds nothing to the allegations of the complaint as already made, and should be stricken out as repetitious, redundant and immaterial.
The court is impressed with the fact that in the ultimate result this is purely an action in negligence, and that the rules of negligence apply; that the allegations of negligence set forth in the
The defendant’s motion must be granted, with ten dollars costs.