This is an action in which the plaintiffs seek to recover from the defendant corporation, hereinafter referred to as Merberg, the amount of a judgment rendered against them in the case of
Bonczkiewicz
v.
Merberg Wrecking Corporation,
The plaintiffs claim reimbursement for the amount of the judgment, which they have paid, on two theories: the first for breach of contract and the second on an implied obligation of indemnity for Merberg’s claimed primary negligence. They claim that their contract with Merberg, printed in the footnote,
1
required Merberg to take all precau
Of course this contract was in no sense of the word a contract of indemnity, as such. See, for instance, cases such as
Gilpatric
v.
National Surety Co.,
The claim most stressed by the plaintiffs seems to be that something more than a fence was required, such as roping off or otherwise closing
It is true, of course, that out of a contractual relationship a tort liability, as in negligence, may arise. See, for instance, cases such as
Bifield
v.
Bruner-Ritter, Inc.,
We turn now to the plaintiffs’ claim of a right of
In this case, the principles governing the right to contribution and the right to indemnity are similar.
Fidelity & Casualty Ins. Co.
v.
Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
There can be no question that the
Bonczkiewicz
case is not res adjudicata as to Merberg in the present case, since Merberg was not a party to the judgment in that case.
Fox
v.
Schaeffer,
Under the court’s charge in the Boncskiewics case, the jury were instructed that the present plaintiffs would not be liable for any negligence of Merberg, an independent contractor, in carrying out the demolition contract, including, of course, any negligence in failing to protect users of the sidewalk. The jury were also instructed that if they found that the contract called for work which, even if it was performed with due care, would obviously and naturally, even though not necessarily, expose pedestrians on the sidewall?: adjacent to the front wall of the building to probable injury unless preventive measures were taken, and that the present plaintiffs knew or in the exercise of reasonable care should have known that the work was of that character and negligently failed to take preventive measures or cause them to be taken, the present plaintiffs would be liable for the injuries proximately caused by their negligence. Bonczkiewicz v. Merberg Wrecking Corporation, supra, 579.
The verdict against the present plaintiffs necessarily established as to them that they were negligent in failing to take preventive measures to avoid injury to passing pedestrians and that this negligence was a proximate cause of the injuries and death for which damages were awarded in the first action. The court in effect so held, and in this determination there was no error. The court below also held that the verdict in the
Bonczkiewicz
case established, as to these plaintiffs, that the negligence
The court also concluded that the personal independent negligence of these plaintiffs, as established in the Bonczkiewicz judgment, necessarily was the same as active or primary negligence as defined in the Preferred Accident case, and that consequently the plaintiffs would not be entitled to indemnity from Merberg whether Merberg was or was not negligent, since even if Merberg was negligent it and the plaintiffs would be joint tort-feasors without right of indemnity. In this conclusion there was error, and if this were the sole ground of decision, it would be reversible error.
An indemnitee may be chargeable with personal negligence, independent of any negligence of the indemnitor, and still not be chargeable with active or primary negligence. Personal independent negligence may be passive or secondary negligence. It need not necessarily be active or primary negligence.
Preferred Accident Ins. Co.
v.
Musante, Berman & Steinberg Co.,
The plaintiff in an action claiming an implied
In order to recover as indemnitees, these plaintiffs had to prove that Merberg was the party primarily liable under our rule as laid down in the Preferred Accident case. This in turn required them to prove that at the time of the accident (1) Merberg was negligent; (2) Merberg’s negligence, rather than the negligence with which these plaintiffs were found chargeable, was the direct, immediate cause of the accident and the resulting injuries and death; (3) Merberg was in control of the situation to the exclusion of these plaintiffs; American Mutual Liability Ins. Co. v. Jarvis, 112 F. Sup. 276, 278 (D. Conn.); (4) the plaintiffs did not know of Merberg’s negligence, had no reason to anticipate it, and could reasonably rely on Merberg not to be negligent.
The court also based its judgment for the defendant, contrary to the plaintiffs’ claim in their brief, on a second, independent ground, and this was that the plaintiffs had failed to prove that, at the time of the accident, Merberg was in control of the situation to the exclusion of the plaintiffs. Control is one of the essential elements of primary negligence
The plaintiffs seem to have perceived this and, as the final assignment of error directed to the finding and pursued in their brief, have sought an addition to the finding to the effect that Merberg “was in entire control of the demolition job including the taking of suitable precautions to prevent injury.” In two other findings not attacked in the plaintiffs’ brief, the court found that George Kaplan was on the job site every day and directed Merberg which walls the plaintiffs wanted taken down and which were to be left standing; that he directed Merberg to leave the front wall of the building to remove some decayed meat from his market in the rear of the premises; that this direction caused Merberg to leave the wrecking operations in the front of the building where the wall was; and that
Whether or not one is in control of a situation is ordinarily a question of fact, and it was here. The plaintiffs in their brief failed to point to anything in their appendix which showed that Merberg admitted, or conceded to be undisputed, the fact sought to be added to the finding. Indeed, the issue of Merberg’s control to the exclusion of the plaintiffs’ control was contested. It follows that the addition sought by the plaintiffs cannot be made.
Brown
v.
Connecticut Light & Power Co.,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
“We will furnish all the plant, labor, equipment and insurance to demolish and remove from the site the building and contents known as 80 West Main Street, Meriden, Connecticut.
“We will remove all the interior and exterior walls level with the existing grade excepting any party walls or other walls you may so direct us to leave intact, and clean out the entire area to the cellar floor but not including the concrete cellar floor. We will alsoerect a fence around the entire property to protect the passing public.
“All the salvage shall become the property of this contractor, and upon completion of operations we are to receive the lump sum of . . . [$7000].
“Our price includes securing the necessary permits as well as removing the respective utility services.”
The distinction between indemnity and contribution was not observed, with precision, in the opinions in our two leading cases involving implied indemnity actions between joint tort-feasors. Thus,
The statement as to the effect o£ the original judgment against the joint tort-feasors as given in
Preferred Accident Ins. Co.
v.
Musante, Berman & Steinberg Co.,
