169 N.Y. 1 | NY | 1901
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *3 The Terminal Railway of Buffalo, a corporation duly organized under the laws of this state for the purpose of constructing a railroad to form a connecting link between the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern and the New York Central and Hudson River railroads, was in 1897 engaged in constructing its road from Depew to Blaisdell, to which end it entered into a contract with the firm of Smith Lally by the terms of which that firm was to perform the entire work of construction in accordance with certain plans and specifications which were made a part of the contract. By the order of the Supreme Court made in pursuance of statute defendant was permitted to construct its road across the White Corners road, a public highway extending from the city of Buffalo to the village of Hamburg, a condition imposed by the order being that it should comply with the statute and restore the highway to such state as not to impair its usefulness. The plans and specifications required that such highway should be lifted eight feet and five inches above its original grade and that the railroad track should be depressed about twelve feet below the original grade, the highway then to be carried across the track by means of an overhead bridge. *5
About the seventh of September work was begun at this point, and the contractors in the course of their operations removed the earth from the west to the east side of the highway resulting in the formation of an embankment covering a little over one-half of the highway for a distance of about six hundred feet north of the proposed crossing, and it extended up to within fifty or one hundred feet of the temporary track. It was about twelve feet wide on top, the sides sloping gradually and its maximum height was seven feet. When completed it was designed to serve as the roadbed of the northerly approach to the bridge over the tracks. The highway at this point was four rods wide, and the presence of the embankment left a space of about thirty feet in width upon the west side thereof for the passage of teams, but only about twelve or fifteen feet of this space was used by the traveling public.
During the evening of September 16th, 1897, the plaintiff and her husband, in company with some ten or twelve other people, while going from Hamburg to Buffalo in a four-seated drag drawn by four horses, in charge of a competent driver, who was ignorant of the existence of the embankment, struck it with the drag, which immediately tipped over, throwing the plaintiff to the ground, from which she received severe injuries. There were no lights upon or in the vicinity of the embankment to warn passers-by of the interference with, and dangerous condition of the highway, and the night was dark and rainy.
The plaintiff had a recovery which the Appellate Division affirmed and afterward allowed an appeal to this court. Through requests to charge, which were refused, and exceptions taken to the charge as made appellant is enabled to present in this court the question whether it is liable because of the omission to properly guard the embankment on the night in question. Its claim is that having let the contract of constructing the entire road to competent and skillful independent contractors it is not liable for any failure on their part to protect passers-by upon the highway by placing lights upon the embankment and otherwise guarding it. *6
The first authority cited by it in support of its position is the well-known case of Blake v. Ferris (
The discussion of the doctrine of respondeat superior in that case was an exhaustive one, and, indeed, it may be said to be a leading case upon that subject, for it has been cited with approval many times by the courts of this state, and in this court in the following, among other cases: Pack v. Mayor etc.,of N.Y. (
Reference will be made to all of these cases in detail later, but for the present I pass to the first case in this court which *7
challenged the correctness of the decision in Blake v. Ferris
upon the ground that the doctrine of respondeat superior was not applicable to the situation presented in that case, namely,Storrs v. City of Utica (
In Brusso v. City of Buffalo (
Vogel v. Mayor, etc. of N.Y. (
In Turner v. City of Newburgh (
In Pettengill v. City of Yonkers (
These cases, as we have seen, recognize the principle that inasmuch as a municipality owes to the public generally the duty of keeping the streets in a safe condition for public travel, although it may temporarily interfere with the streets for the public good by constructing sewers therein, laying water mains and making such other excavations from time to time as the public needs require, it still owes the public the duty of protecting them from falling or driving into such excavations, which in some cases can only be performed by constructing barriers across the streets to prevent their use by the public temporarily, and in others may be fully accomplished by properly lighting such excavations in the night time, and otherwise guarding them so as to permit, without danger to the passer-by, the free use of that portion of the street which has not been interfered with. And this obligation it cannot escape by letting the work of excavation to an independent contractor, although it is legally absolved from injuries resulting from the negligent acts of the servants of the contractor in the prosecution of the work.
Attention will now be given to the leading cases in this court, citing Blake v. Ferris, which are claimed by appellant's counsel to fully sustain that case, and also to be in hostility to the decision in Storrs v. City of Utica.
Pack v. Mayor, etc. of N.Y. and Kelly v. Mayor, etc. ofN.Y. (supra), may be considered together, as each presented the same question. In each the municipal corporation had contracted for the grading of a street with an independent contractor, and in each the plaintiff was injured as the result of carelessness of the contractor's employees in blasting. It was held in those cases, as it had been in Blake v. Ferris, and has since been in every case where the question has been up, that the city was not liable, as the injuries were occasioned by the *11 neglect of the contractor's employees over whom the city had no control whatever in the performance of the work undertaken by the contractor. Both of these cases were referred to in Storrs v.City of Utica as correctly applying the "general principles so well set forth in Blake v. Ferris."
The question presented in McCafferty v. S.D., P.M.R.R.Co. (supra) did not relate to the public streets at all. The injury complained of was occasioned by the negligent acts of the employees of a contractor who was blasting out rocks so as to throw them upon the lands of another. The railroad company which owned the lands upon which the blasting was being conducted was prosecuted for the injury, and this court held, on the authority of the Pack, Kelly and other cases, that the defendant having let out the work of construction to an independent contractor, it was not liable for the negligence of the men employed by him. Judge EARL, in the opinion, referred to the Storrs case as expressly approving the Pack and Kelly cases, and as criticising Blake v. Ferris, and stated the distinction between the Storrs case and the one under review in these words: "In that case the defendant was held liable because it owed a duty to the public to keep the streets in a safe condition for travel and not because it was responsible for any negligent acts of the contractor."
In Herrington v. Village of Lansingburgh (supra) the injuries sustained by the plaintiff were occasioned by the carelessness of the employees of an independent contractor in blasting for the purpose of the construction of a sewer. The question presented, therefore, was precisely the same as in thePack and Kelly cases, and the municipality was held not liable upon the authority of those cases.
In Charlock v. Freel the inquiry was not whether the city was liable, but whether an independent contractor was. The defendant Freel sought to evade liability upon the ground that he was not an independent contractor, but a mere servant of the city. But his contention was not sustained and the judgment against him was affirmed. As that was a case *12 where the injuries were sustained by falling into a hole in the public streets created under the direction of the defendant, it may well have been that the city was also liable. But that question was not before the court for decision, nor was it discussed.
In Butler v. Townsend (supra) the injuries to the plaintiff were occasioned by the falling of the staging around a vessel upon which the plaintiff stood in order to calk the vessel, and Blake v. Ferris was cited merely as an authority upon the question involved in that case, whether the relation of employer and employee existed between the defendant and the plaintiff.
Nor did Berg v. Parsons have to do with the public streets. In that case an owner contracted with another to excavate his lot for building purposes, and the contractor so carelessly conducted the blasting that rocks were thrown upon and injured the property of another, and it was held, citing Blake v. Ferris, and thePack, Kelly and McCafferty cases, that the owner was not responsible for the negligent performance of the work by the contractor.
Nor did Uppington v. City of New York (supra) present the question whether a municipality is bound to see to it that excavations which it authorizes in the public streets are guarded at night for the protection of the traveler. The injury which the plaintiff sustained in that case was not personal, coming to him while upon the public street, but instead was an injury to his lands occasioned by the settling of the ground in front of his premises due to the negligent manner in which the contractor had filled an excavation necessary to the construction of a sewer. As the city had authority by law to construct the sewer by contract, and had fully performed all the obligations resting upon it in that regard, it was held that it was not liable on its part for injury to adjoining lands resulting from the negligence of an independent and concededly competent contractor. In support of that general proposition it cited Blake v. Ferris, Berg v.Parsons and other authorities sustaining it. Many others might have been cited, for the authorities upon that general proposition are in agreement in this court. *13
I have thus called attention to the principal authorities relied upon by the appellant in support of his contention thatBlake v. Ferris is still the law for every question decided by it, and have pointed out the fact that not one of those cases presents one of the questions decided by the Blake case, namely, that a party having authority to make the public streets dangerous for passers-by may be relieved from the burden of guarding the place of danger in the street by letting the work to an independent contractor. On the other hand, it has been observed that so much of the decision in Blake v. Ferris as so decided was distinctly overruled in the Storrs case, the doctrine of which, in that respect, has since been followed in several cases where the question was up for decision. From the time of the decision in the Storrs case until now this court has consistently recognized the distinction between the two cases, rightly treating Blake v. Ferris as the leading case so far as it involves a consideration of the general principles of respondeat superior, and the Storrs case as establishing that such rule is not applicable to a case where the injury results from a failure on the part of the municipality to properly guard an excavation or obstruction authorized by it in a public street committed to its care.
Now, dominion over the highway was, by the operation of the statute, upon the order of the Supreme Court, for the purpose of carrying the highway over the railroad tracks vested in the defendant railroad company, which having accepted the privileges and benefits conferred upon it by statute, necessarily took with them all the obligations and liabilities in respect to the highway which its absolute dominion over it for the purpose of carrying it across the railroad track made necessary, among which was the duty of so guarding the obstructions to the highway which were made under its direction as to save passers-by from injury.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
GRAY, O'BRIEN, HAIGHT, LANDON, CULLEN and WERNER, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed. *14