46 A.D. 541 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
• This appeal is taken by the plaintiff from a judgment in favor of the defendant, John B. Ireland, entered upon a dismissal of the complaint (as to Mr. Ireland) in an action to recover damages for personal injuries. .
The accident, which resulted in the grievous injury sustained by the plaintiff, was due to the insecurity of the foundation of one of the middle row of columns which supported a large structure being built upon the defendant’s land. Thére can be no doubt of the facts connected with the cause of the accident. On the middle line of ■ the building, at equal intervals of space, were five cast iron columns ■running from front to rear. The weight of the center of the superstructure, a building some eight stories high, bearing upon one of these columns, drove it through the insufficient foundation upon which it rested and caused the interior of the building, in which the plaintiff was working, to fall. ' The column was driven some seven and one-half feet into the earth. The defendant Ireland had, as
Although Parker was an independent contractor, Mr. Ireland would still be liable unless he had discharged the duty which •devolved upon him of taking such means either by himself or through others, as would make the foundations of the building safe for the plaintiff and others working on the superstructure. If Mr. Ireland' had Undertaken to prepare the plans for this building and to superintend its construction, and by reason of defects in the plans •or of carelessness in construction a person lawfully upon the building or employed therein had been injured, the liability of the owner plainly would have been made out, as was held in Pitcher v. Lennon (12 App. Div. 356), and the fact that the plans were passed upon and approved by the department of buildings of the city of New York would not have relieved the owner from responsibility, as was also held in the same case. But where an owner employs a competent architect to draw plans and superintend the construction •of a great building, such as that which the defendant Ireland was engaged in erecting, we think he discharges his duty if he commits the whole subject to a fully qualified architect and does not, in any way, interfere with, direct or control him. We are of the opinion that this case is to be disposed of, as the proofs are now before us, by considerations relating to the competency of the architect and the right of the defendant Ireland’ to rely upon the skill and fidelity of the architect.
The cause of the falling of the building was, undoubtedly,- the insufficient foundation for the column. It was built partly over the old cistern wall on disturbed ground, contrary to the requirements of the contract. The architect could have prevented or corrected that. Had the plan been different, or had no alteration in the depth of the concrete as called for .by the plans been made, or had the superintendence of the work been more efficient, the accident would not have occurred. The owner would have had the right to rely upon plans drawn by a skillful architect, because the work' of devising and providing for the erection of a great building is a matter which requires special and, to some extent, scientific knowledge. One of the engineering witnesses for the plaintiff" said that it requires a man who has had experience or education to enable him
Without adverting to other matters elaborately discussed by ■counsel, we think the nonsuit was improperly directed, because the -defendant Ireland is not exonerated from liability, it not being shown that he employed a skilled and competent architect, and that he relied upon him both for the preparation of plans and the superintendence and inspection of the work, and. that he did not interfere with the architect in the discharge of the duties the latter assumed
For the want of evidence to show' that Mr. Ireland could rightfully rely upon the architect he employed, the judgment and order must be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
O’Brien, Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred; Yak. Brunt, P. J., concurred in result.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event. .