RICHARD FABRIZI, Respondent, v 1095 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS, L.L.C., et al., Appellants, et al., Defendants. (And Other Actions.)
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department
May 3, 2012
951 NYS2d 480
Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Emily Jane Goodman, J.), entered June 9, 2011, which, to the extent appealed from, denied defendants 1095 Avenue of the Americas, L.L.C. and J.T. Magen Construction Company, Inc.‘s motion for summary judgment dismissing the
Plaintiff, an electrician employed by nonparty Forest Electric Corp., was working at a job site where the general contractor was gutting and remodeling a commercial space. He was injured when he was struck in the hand by a piece of galvanized steel conduit pipe. The pipe had been attached to another piece of pipe by a compression coupling at the ceiling before it fell. At the time of the accident, plaintiff was engaged in moving a pool box (also called a pencil box), a device used to access telecommunication wires. The box was connected to a section of conduit piping running from the floor to the ceiling, as well as to a support system known as Kindorf supports. After cutting the conduit to remove the pencil box, plaintiff kneeled down to drill into the floor in order to reposition the conduit and the pencil box, when the piece of conduit that was secured to the other pipe came loose and fell upon him.
Contrary to defendants’ argument, adopted by Justice Tom in
The dissent misconstrues plaintiff‘s claim when it asserts that plaintiff‘s theory of recovery is flawed because
The dissent cites Narducci v Manhasset Bay Assoc. (96 NY2d 259, 268 [2001]), which states that “for
Furthermore, the dissent‘s analogy to Narducci is inapt. In that case, the plaintiff was injured when glass fell from a window that was not being worked on during the renovation but was part of the preexisting building structure. In contrast, here, plaintiff‘s employer had been engaged in overhauling the building‘s electrical system, and at the time of the accident, plaintiff had been doing conduit work and installation of pool boxes. Following the completion of the work, the general contractor issued a change order, directing the relocation of the pool box. Thus, plaintiff was not injured by a part of the preexisting structure unrelated to the work he was performing but was injured by the apparatus that had been installed by his employer and was being relocated.
The dissent also posits two different methods by which plaintiff could have performed the work that would have eliminated any possibility that the hanging conduit would fall. However, “no evidence, expert or lay, was submitted that either of these options were appropriate” (Cordeiro v TS Midtown Holdings, LLC, 87 AD3d 904, 905 [2011]).2 Concur — Moskowitz, Richter and Abdus-Salaam, JJ.
Román, J., concurs in part and dissents in part in a memorandum as follows: While I agree with the majority‘s position that the accident here falls within the ambit of
In cases pursuant to
On the date of his accident, plaintiff was tasked with repositioning an already installed pencil box within a telecommunications closet on the 11th floor. Plaintiff intended to move the pencil box, which was already affixed to a conduit running from the floor below to the floor above. He unscrewed the pencil box from the Kindorf and then used a saw to make cuts in the conduit, which enabled him to unscrewed and remove the pencil box. Plaintiff removed the pencil box and proceeded to drill the new holes necessary for the pencil box‘s relocation. As he drilled, the conduit above where the pencil box had been was still affixed to the compression coupling above. Suddenly, the conduit fell, coming loose from its compression coupling, falling on top of plaintiff‘s hand, and causing him injury. Before the accident,
Plaintiff commenced this action, alleging a cause of action for common-law negligence and causes of action pursuant to
Defendants appeal, seeking reversal of the motion court‘s order to the extent it granted plaintiff‘s motion for partial summary judgment and denied their motion to dismiss plaintiff‘s cause of action pursuant to
Since not every injury caused by the effects of gravity falls within the ambit of
Appreciable risk of a particular harm, or, more particularly, foreseeability, as an element of any
Recently, in Runner v New York Stock Exch., Inc. (13 NY3d 599 [2009]), the Court of Appeals reiterated that while the applicability of
In Rocovich, the Court, in addressing what kinds of tasks fell within the purview of the statute, held that given the types of devices called for by
In Outar v City of New York (5 NY3d 731 [2005]), the Court of Appeals again implied that foreseeability was dispositive in determining the applicability of
Following Court of Appeals precedent, in Buckley, we expressly held that the dispositive issue with respect to the statute‘s applicability is “the foreseeable risks of harm presented by the nature of the work being performed” (44 AD3d 268 at 268). Thereafter, in Jones, Espinosa, and most recently in Vasquez, we continued to hold that foreseeability is an essential prerequisite to liability under
Based on the foregoing, it is beyond cavil that in cases pursuant to
Defendants’ contention that plaintiff‘s accident does not come within the ambit of
foreseeable gravity-related risk, such that his task and indeed his resulting accident fall squarely within the ambit of
Here, however, the conduit that ultimately fell was in fact secured and held in place by a compression coupling that had attached the falling conduit to the conduit on the floor above. The conduit was also held in place by a compression connector attaching the conduit to the pencil box. The pencil box, in turn, was held in place by its attachment to the Kindorf, a brace-like piece of metal attached to the walls. Thus, defendants did in fact provide plaintiff with a host of safety devices that served to secure the conduit and prevent its fall. I therefore turn to whether the compression coupling failed to properly secure the conduit so that plaintiff is entitled to have liability resolved in his favor, or, as argued by defendants, that this accident is solely the result of plaintiff‘s misuse of the compression coupling, so that dismissal of his claim is warranted.
Liability under
Defendants argue that the safety device—the compression coupling—failed because plaintiff misused it, and that this misuse was the sole proximate cause of his accident. Specifically, defendants aver that the compression coupling adequately supported the weight of the upper conduit when it was used in conjunction with the Kindorf that secured the pencil box and to which the conduit was affixed. Thus, defendants argue that plaintiff‘s decision to remove the pencil box, part of the conduit‘s support, thereby leaving the conduit to hang solely from the compression coupling, overstressed the coupling, causing it to fail. Conversely, plaintiff argues that since the conduit fell, the compression coupling was thus inadequate to protect him from the gravity-related hazard posed by the conduit and that, accordingly, defendants violated
Having provided a safety device, defendants are only liable if the compression coupling failed because it was inadequate to secure the conduit, thereby causing this accident. While the compression coupling failed, the record supports defendants’ contention that such failure was attributable to plaintiff‘s misuse of the coupling, namely the method by which plaintiff performed his work. Therefore, there exists a sharp question of fact with respect to whether the compression coupling holding the conduit in place failed because it was inadequate or because plaintiff misused the coupling by removing supports designed to be used in conjunction therewith; the former constituting a violation of
While not addressed by the majority, upon a search of the record, I find, for the very same reasons asserted by the motion court, that Dechert, while not having moved for summary judgment below, is nevertheless entitled to summary judgment dismissing plaintiff‘s causes of action for common-law negligence and pursuant to
Accordingly, I would not only modify the motion court‘s order to deny plaintiff summary judgment, but would also grant Dechert summary judgment on plaintiff‘s claims of common-law negligence and pursuant to
Tom, J.P., dissents in a memorandum as follows: Plaintiff‘s employer, nonparty Forest Electric, was retained to overhaul the wiring in the building known as 1095 Avenue of the Americas in Manhattan. After the company completed the installation of a four-inch wide “riser” (a vertical run of conduit) in the 11th-floor telecommunications closet, it received a change order to relocate the riser because a rectangular pull box, or “pencil box,” was obstructing conduit being installed parallel to it by another company. As plaintiff explained, a pull box is installed in a riser to allow wiring to be pulled through the pipe from above or below. The work required plaintiff to remove the pull box, which was secured to a steel strut channel (Kindorf support) affixed to the floor and, at the top of the strut channel by means of a perpendicular extension, to the wall located a few feet away. The section of conduit below the pull box was secured at floor level with a clamp. The conduit above the pull box was held in place with a strap attached to the top of the Kindorf support and was joined at its top to another section of vertical conduit by a compression coupling, a ring-shaped device that tightens around the ends of the adjoining sections of conduit to hold the pipes in alignment and help secure them in place.
In the process of relocating the pull box, plaintiff had to drill new holes in the concrete floor directly underneath the new location to affix the lower bracket of the strut channel to the floor. Before drilling the holes, plaintiff cut through the conduit above the pull box with a Sawzall (a reciprocating demolition saw) and removed the box from the lower conduit and the Kindorf support. At this point, the upper section of conduit was secured only by the compression coupling holding it to the conduit above it. As plaintiff knelt on the floor drilling the holes for the support bracket, the upper section of conduit fell onto his right hand, breaking his thumb.
Plaintiff alleges that defendants violated
Here, there was no violation of
Plaintiff‘s theory of recovery under
Further, there is no testimony, expert or otherwise, that such couplings are meant to suspend a substantial weight, and the
The majority misreads plaintiff‘s deposition testimony in stating that “when directed to move the pool [sic] box, he requested a set screw coupling to secure the pipe.” Plaintiff merely testified that compression couplings had been exclusively used by Forest Electric in performing the electrical work.
“Q. At any time after your accident, did you ever learn as to why compression screw coupling was used as opposed to set screw coupling?
“A. No. It‘s basic. They are both basic couplings.
“Q. Did you ever learn why one was used as opposed to the other?
“A. No.”
Moreover, the majority‘s presumption that if only a set screw coupling had been made available to plaintiff his injury would have been prevented reveals its misunderstanding of the makeup of conduit pipe system and the operation in which he was engaged. Even if plaintiff had specifically requested a set screw coupling to use in his assigned task of moving the pull box, which he did not, he would have been required to first remove the existing compression coupling since at the time of the accident, that was the only thing holding the section of conduit that fell on him to the pipe above it, as reflected in plaintiff‘s testimony.
“Q. Is it possible at the time of the accident that the bottom of the conduit was still supported by the compression coupling? Is it possible at the time of the accident that the bottom of the conduit was still being locked in and was being supported by the compression connector?
“A. The top piece of conduit was being supported by the top compression coupling . . .
“Q. So the conduit was supported by the compression coupling at the time only?
“A. Yes.”
As indicated above, the removal of the existing compression coupling in order to be replaced by a set screw coupling would have meant removing or releasing the section of conduit pipe that fell. Had plaintiff done so, there would have been no need to secure the pipe with a new set screw coupling; the conduit‘s removal would have eliminated the hazard it presented.
Unlike Quattrocchi v F.J. Sciame Constr. Corp. (11 NY3d 757 [2008]), citing Outar v City of New York, 5 NY3d 731 [2005], on which plaintiff relies, there is no allegation in this case that the falling object was unsecured before the work commenced (Outar v City of New York, 286 AD2d 671, 672 [2001] [falling dolly]; Wilinski v 334 E. 92nd Hous. Dev. Fund Corp., 18 NY3d 1, 5 [2011] [falling pipes not secured when work commenced]). Rather, the conduit became unsecured as the direct consequence of plaintiff‘s own actions, which were the sole proximate cause of his injuries.
In contrast to the plaintiff in Narducci, who had no choice but to work beneath the window glass that fell on him, plaintiff herein could have taken basic precautions to prevent injury. To recapitulate, when plaintiff began work, the section of conduit that ultimately fell was supported by a clamp positioned about two feet above the pencil box and affixed to a supporting steel strut channel structure attached to the wall. The conduit was further supported by the box itself, on which the pipe rested and which was likewise affixed to the Kindorf support. Thus, plaintiff had the option of leaving in place both the clamp and the box while he drilled a hole in the floor beneath. In the alternative, having removed both the clamp and box, the logical and prudent course would have been to loosen the single compression coupling suspending the remaining section of the top conduit and remove that length of pipe, thereby eliminating any possibility that the hanging conduit would fall and injure him. Once again, the section of conduit pipe in issue was properly secured in place by supporting devices when the work began.
Accordingly, the order should be reversed, to the extent appealed from, and plaintiff‘s
