21 N.Y.S. 1016 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1893
This case was tried at trial term, and resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $2,500, whereupon the trial judge ordered the exceptions to be heard at the general term in the first instance. On the trial it appeared that in May, 1889, the plaintiff was the owner of a house and lot on West Sixtieth street, and that Nicholas Henry was the owner of a vacant lot immediately adjoining on the west. In that month, Henry entered into a contract with the defendants Vix for the erection of a building on his lot. This contract contained, among ■other things, the following clause:
“And the said parties of the second part [Vis] further agree to become answerable and accountable for any damages that may be done to the property or person of any neighbor or passer-by during the performance of said work.”
It further appeared that the surface of Henry’s lot was covered with rock, and the defendants Vix made a subcontract with the defendant Dolan, a blaster, to excavate the earth and rock, which contained the following provision:
“The said Dolan hereby assumes all responsibility for any loss or damage -which may occur to person or property while he or his employes are engaged in the performance of such work, and hereby agrees to save the said JacobVix & Son harmless from the payment of any such loss. ”
Dolan commenced to work about the 25th May, 1889, and the first blast was on the 14th June in that year. In preparation for that blast, Dolan’s workmen drilled a row of six holes within five feet of the wall of plaintiff’s house, and two other rows,—in all eighteen holes. This was done by machinery, and the holes were each eight feet deep and four feet apart; the rows being the same distance apart. When this blast was let off, it caused the ceiling in the hall and in every room in plaintiff’s house to fall; the stoop was knocked down; several stone banisters broken; the heavy newel posts separated from the stoop; the brownstone under the stoop was knocked out of place; also the iron door; four of the beams holding the basement floor were split; the heavy iron sewer pipe was broken; and other considerable damage done the building. After this the blasting continued, and other injury was done to plaintiff’s property. To recover for these injuries this action was brought against the Vixes and Dolan; the complaint alleging that Dolan was the agent of the Vixes, and that the Vixes, by their contract with Henry, had agreed to become and be accountable and personally responsible for any and all damages that might or should be done to the adjoining property by reason of the prosecution of the work, and that the rock was blasted in a negligent and unlawful manner, and that by reason thereof the damage was done. The answer of the Vixes denied that Dolan was their agent, or that they had any control over or knowledge of the manner in in which the work was done, and alleged that Dolan did the work as an independent contractor. He also interposed an answer, and was present
We think the ground assumed by the learned judge in this case at the trial term is untenable. If the Vixes were indemnitors, they were only such as to Mr. Henry, the only person with whom the}' contracted, as it must be assumed from an inspection of the contract that he only contracted on his own behalf and for his own security, and to.relieve himself from all liability to others by reason of any of the work done upon his i¡remises. In fact, this was conceded by the court below, for the only circuity of action possible is that the plaintiff should first sue Henry, and, if she recovered, Henry might have an action over against the Vixes for the amount he was compelled to pay her. It follows that the plaintiff cannot recover against the Vixes unless she had a right of action against Henry. To hold otherwise is to. say that the stipulation in the contract was inserted by Henry, not to protect him from claims which he supposed could be enforced against him, but so that “any néighbor or passer-by ” might have a right of action against the Vixes in cases where such persons could not have a right of action against him; and this, irrespective of the question of whether the damage was lawfully or unlawfully done, for the clause is not restricted. The question then resolves itself into this: . Were the acts complained of such as would authorize a recovery against Henry, provided the work had been done by the Vixes themselves under the contract they had made with Henry? In other words, would Henry be protected from liability under the rule of respondeat superior? This' in turn depends upon the answer to another question: Did the damage necessarily result from the nature of the work itself, or did it result from the manner in which the-work was performed? If the work done was bound to produce the result, the person for whose benefit the work is done cannot shield himself by showing that the work .was done by an independent contractor,.
“The accident was in no way caused by any imperfect condition of. the street, but simply by noise resulting from the blast. If there was any culpable carelessness which caused the injury to the plaintiff, it was that of the contractors. They had entire control of the work and the manner of its performance. They could choose their own time for tiring the blast, and select their own agents and instrumentalities. They could make the charges of powder large or small, and they could in some degree smother the blasts, so as to prevent falling rocks and much of the noise of the explosion; or they could carelessly omit all precau-. tians, and for the consequences of their negligence they alone would be responsible. If it were a prudent thing to notify persons in the vicinity of the blast before it was tired, then the contractors should have given notice, but the duty to give it did not devolve upon the village; and for these conclusions the cases of Pack v. Mayor, etc., 8 N. Y. 222, Kelly v. Mayor, etc., 11 N. Y. 432, and McCafferty v. Railroad Co., 61 N. Y. 178, are ample authority. It is conceded by the learned counsel for the plaintiff that, if the plaintiff bad been hit by a fragment of rock thrown by the blast, the defendant would not have been, and the contractors would alone have been, responsible. So, too, if a fragment of rock had struck one of the horses, or had fallen or passed near them, and this had frightened them, causing the injury to the plaintiff, within the authorities cited the defendant would not have been responsible. * * * A rule which would cast responsibility upon the defendant for injuries resulting from the noise of the explosion, and exempt it from responsibility for injuries caused by fragments of rock thrown by the explosion,'would rest upon no rational basis, and require distinctions too tine for the practical administration of justice.”
See, also, Brennan v. Gellick.
These authorities all establish that blasting rock does not necessarily cause injury, and that damage arising therefrom is solely the result of
The case of Storrs v. Utica, supra, is the only one in any way in conflict with the foregoing reasoning, and that we think has been entirely overruled, or greatly modified, by the court of appeals in Charlock v. Freel, 125 N. Y. 357, 26 N. E. Rep. 262. But assuming that Water Co. v. Ware does establish that Henry was liable to the plaintiff, and that she could therefore sue the Vixes direct because liable over to Henry, still the plaintiff ought not to" succeed here, for she did not bring herself within the conditions laid down in that case. There the gravamen of the action was negligence, and the fact that the jury found that there was negligence permeates the whole opinion. Here, although the plaintiff' had alleged that the Vixes were liable solely because of negligence, the court expressly.held that she was entitled to recover without showing such negligence. The plaintiff’s theory, that the defendants are insurers, has no countenance from Water Co. v. Ware, supra. If the defendants were insurers of Mrs. French, then she was insured as to her own property, without her knowledge, by Henry, who did not act as her agent, and who had no insurable interest of his own in her property. A contract of insurance by a person havjng no interest would be void as a wager policy. Again, no'consideration was paid by Henry to the Vixes for the insurance of Mrs. French. All that he desired was to have a building erected in accordance with the specifications, and to be secured from any damages either in contesting or otherwise disposing of
Plaintiff also claims that in McMahon v. Railroad Co., 75 N. Y. 231, the defendant was held liable under a contract. We think the learned counsel has fallen into an error in respect to this case. The defendant was sued in negligence. A contract was offered in evidence, and it was proved that the defendant had been negligent in the discharge of its duties under that contract; and so the court held that “the reception of the agreement in evidence did not change the cause of action from one arising in tort to one based upon contract.” In the case under consideration the recovery was had on the contract alone, without proof of negligence thereunder, although the complaint alleged that the cause of action arose through negligence under a contract. Little v. Banks, 85 N. Y. 258, cited by the learned counsel for the plaintiff, is not in point in this case. There the contract was made by a state officer with a bookseller, and the point of the decision was that the action could be maintained by Little on a contract made between Banks and the state, where the officers enter into it for the advantage and welfare of the public, and where such a provision constitutes a material portion of the agreement which is essential to carry it into effect. The contract between Henry and the Vixes was not made by Henry as a public officer, for the welfare of the public, but as a private individual, for his own benefit, and the stipulation as to damages was not a material portion of the agreement which is essential to carry it into effect. In Todd v. Weber, 95 N. Y. 181, the foundation of the liability was that “ the natural obligation arising out of his relation to the Child is a sufficient consideration for a contract on his part to pay for its support and maintenance.” But Henry -owed no obligation to the plaintiff, or any other neighbor or passer-by, and nothing in Henry’s relations with the plaintiff constituted a consideration .-as between them that entitled her to any benefit in the stipulation. Besides, in Todd v. Weber the promise was made to do a specific thing for :a specific person; but the stipulation in the case at bar is for the benefit of Henry alone, or else must be for the benefit of the whole world. In Rector v. Teed, 120 N. Y. 583, 24 N. E. Rep. 1014, there was a promise •on consideration to pay a specific sum to a specific person. The court says:
“A party for whose benefit a promise was made may sue in assumpsit theréon, ■even if the consideration therefor arose between the promisor and a third person. ”
But in this case, as far as we can perceive, there was no consideration from Henry to the Vixes for a stipulation inuring to the benefit of third persons. Henry wanted a house built, and he agreed with the Vixes tti jpay a certain sum for having it built. That sum was the consideration
“To enable a third party to enforce a promise, there must be privity by substitution between the parties, or some prior right or claim against one of the contracting parties, by which he had a legal interest in the performance of the agreement. ”
We therefore think that the court erred in withdrawing the question of negligence from the jury, and in holding that, without any proof of such negligence, the Yixes were liable. The verdict of the jury should therefore be set aside, and a new trial ordered, with costs to the defendants Vix to abide the event. All concur.
NOTE.
Brennan v. Gellick et al. was decided by Gildersleeve, J., who filed the following memorandum at a special term of the superior court of New York city, on April 28, 1892:
“The plaintiff is the owner of a five-story brick apartment house, being No. 405 East Eighty-Eighth street, occupied by nine tenants. The defendant Schreiner is the owner of lots immediately adjoining on the east, being Nos. 407 and 409 East Eighty-Eighth street, which lots are covered with rock, which extends a considerable depth below the surface, and forms part of the stratum, as plaintiff claims, which runs underneath plaintiff’s said dwelling house. The defendant Schreiner has made a contract with the defendant Gellick to remove said rock from his said premises by blasting. Such blasting has done considerable damage to the plaintiff’s property, and plaintiff secured a temporary injunction restraining defendants from further blasting, which injunction the plaintiff now seeks to have continued pendente lite. The defendant Gellick is an independent contractor, and it is not claimed that the relation of master and servant exists between the defendants. The defendant Schreiner demurred to the complaint, claiming that, as he had made an independent contract with the other defendant, he is not liable for the negligence or wrongful acts of said defendant Gellick. I think, under the state of facts as disclosed by the papers before me, the demurrer should be sustained. A party is not chargeable with the negligent act of another in doing work upon his lands unless he stands in the character of employer to the one guilty of the negligence, or unless the work as authorized would necessarily produce the injuries complained of, or they are occasioned by the omission of some duty incumbent upon him. McCafferty v. Railroad Co., 61 N. Y. 179; Burmeister v. Railroad Co., 47 N. Y. Super. Ct. 267. The plaintiff claims that the work per se was wrongful and injurious to the plaintiff, and that therefore the owner, as well as the contractor, were liable for any injury to plaintiff, whether the contractor was negligent or not. But the facts, so far as they may be gathered from the papers herein, do not sustain this contention. It seems that the injuries complained of were the result of an accident, and are not the intrinsic and necessary results of the. work called for by the contract between the two defendants. To hold that blasting in the city of New York is intrinsically dangerous and unlawful would be to put an end to all public improvements. In the case at bar the affidavits of the experts show that the work can be done without injury to the property of plaintiff. No negligence in blasting or removing rock under said contract is alleged in the moving papers. The plaintiff rests her rights upon the broad claim that the work contracted for is in its nature dangerous; that said work was so wrongful and injurious per se to the plaintiff that its actionability does not depend upon negligence in doing it. But I am satisfied from the evidence before me that, with due care and skill, the contractor can carry on the work in question without imperiling the plaintiff’s adjacent house. I cannot see that plaintiff has adequate cause to fear irreparable injury, and therefore I am not warranted in making an order continuing the injunction. I may add, however, that should the contractor continue the work in a manner to cause further injury to the plaintiff’s property, upon sufficient evidence of the continuously injurious character of the work I think an appeal might properly be made to a court of equity to limit and restrain the defendant contractor in the manner in*1024 which the work should be conducted; and, should there be sufficient evidence of a persistence on his part to carry on the work iñ a heedless and reckless manner, he might be restrained altogether in the prosecution thereof. ”
See note at end of case.