75 N.Y.S. 913 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
This is an action, under the statute (Code Civ. Proc. § 1902 et seq.), to recover for the death of William Koch, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendants.
The premises situate on the southerly side of Dover street, in the city of Hew York, and known as Hos. 2, 4, 6 and 8, were owned by the appellant Fox, who, on the 21st day of February, 1899, entered into a contract with the defendant Cabus for the erection thereon of -a six-story store and apartment building with basement or cellar according to certain drawings and specifications which had been prepared for the owner by an architect. The contractor- agreed to furnish all material and labor and to complete the entire work for a gross sum. The work was to be done under the general supervision of the architect, and the contractor agreed to properly guard against all injuries to employees or to the public, to comply with all laws relating to building in force in the city of Hew York, and with the rules and regulations of the'department of buildings, and to give all notices required and to obtain all official permits and pay the fees therefor. The owner was in Europe and gave no directions or instructions to the contractor. The only directions given by the architect related to the execution of the contract according to the plans and specifications. Cabus was a builder of eight years’ experience and no question was raised as to his competency. He had never erected or been required to erect a covering over a walk and the architect made no request that he do so in this instance.
On the 14th- of March, 1899, Cabus sublet the mason work to the appellant Zimmermann. One Herrell likewise had a sub-contract from Cabus for putting in the beams, floors, studding and rough carpenter work, and the decedent, a framer by trade, was employed by him. On the 10th day of July, 1899, while the decedent was on the middle of the sidewalk, in the public street adjacent to the premises, in the act of carrying strips of wood into the building, in the course of such employment, he was struck on the head by half a brick, which the evidence tended to show fell from a scaffold over the sidewalk opposite the sixth story of the building, where the employees of Zimmermann were laying brick.
The only negligence with which the owner and general contractor are charged in the complaint is failure -to erect a- shed over the side
“ That hereafter the owner or general contractor engaged in the construction or erection of any building over five stories in height, shall build, or cause to be built, a temporary roof structure over the sidewalk in front of said building, and said contractor or owner, prior tó the erection of such bridge or roof, must secure permission for such construction from the Commissioner of Public Works, and shall pay therefor such compensation as may be deemed equivalent by said Commissioner for the privilege so conferred.”
It is conceded that the ordinance was not complied with, either by the owner or general contractor. Bankruptcy proceedings are pending against the latter, and the action was stayed as to him.
Counsel for the owner moved for a nonsuit and for a direction of a verdict upon the ground that upon the facts here presented the ordinance imposed no duty upon his client. The court denied these motions and instructed the jury that it was the duty of the owner, as well as of the general contractor, to construct a covering over the walk in conformity with the ordinance. Exceptions were duly taken to these rulings. The many important questions arising on this appeal will now be stated and considered separately.
First. The first question presented is, does this ordinance operate upon both owner and contractor, or was it designed to require the one actually performing the work to construct the covered way ?
The true interpretation of a statute or ordinance requires a consideration of the prior -law, of the mischief or evil sought to be remedied and the remedy prescribed. (Potter’s Dwar. Stat. 184.) An important inquiry is, therefore, whether on similar facts the owner would have been liable before the enactment of the ordinance. The construction of a six-story apartment building adjacent to a public street, but on private premises, is not a work either imminently or necessarily dangerous. It did not involve any interference with the surface of the street. By the exercise of ordinary
Second. But if the ordinance imposes a duty or obligation upon the owner as well as the contractor, while he would be subject to the penalty imposed for its violation, it by no means follows that it creates a new cause of action in favor of third parties for a failure on the part of the owner to comply therewith. It is made plain by the authorities already considered that if the owner is liable at all it is solely for his omission to comply with the ordinance, which does not regulate or prescribe the manner of performing an existing duty, but imposes a new obligation not resting upon or connected with any common-law or statutory duty.
While the rule is not uniform in all jurisdictions, ordinarily the violation of an ordinance does not in and of itself constitute negligence. It is merely evidence of negligence where some common-law duty in the premises rested upon the party violating it. (Knupfle v. Knickerbocker Ice Co., 84 N. Y. 488; Massoth v. D.
It may be conceded that in a proper case it is competent for the ‘Legislature, under its general police power, to impose a new duty for the protection.or safety of the pub[ic of of persons occupying or in. buildings, the violation of which, if it directly and without any intervening cause results in injury or damage, will give rise to a cause of action, and doubtless the Legislature may delegate this authority to a municipal legislature. (Dorrity v. Rapp, supra ; Pauley v. S. G. & L. Co., 131 N. Y. 90 ; Freeman v. Glens Falls Paper Mill Co., 61 Hun, 125; Willy v. Mulledy, 78 N. Y. 310; Ryan v. Thomson, 38 N. Y. Super. Ct. 133 ; Pitcher v. Lennon, 12 App. Div. 356, 359 ; McLaughlin v. Armfield, 58 Hun, 376; Parker v. Barnard, 135 Mass. 116; Woodruff, Administratrix, v. Bowen, 136 Ind. 431.) In all cases where such liability has been imposed and sustained, except the Wisconsin case cited, the omission to comply with the law or ordinance was the direct cause of the injury without the intervention of other negligence.
If the municipal legislators were authorized to enact an ordinance imposing a liability which, in a case like this, would make the owner answerable for the personal negligence of the contractor, sub-contractor and their employees, does this ordinance indicate an intent to impose such liability ? The ordinance in terms merely requires the erection of the shed, and does not purport to reverse or overrule the settled law on the subject and declare that the owner shall be responsible for the negligence of his independent contractor. The object of the ordinance is to prevent accidents, not to regulate liability therefor. Under the general law the owner owed no duty and was under no liability to persons injured under such circumstances ; and, since the law permits an owner to relieve himself from liability for the personal negligence of a contractor, it is not within the province of the municipal assembly to create a cause of action against him for injuries resulting from such negligence, even though the injuries might not have happened if he complied with the ordinance. (City of Rochester v. Campbell, 123 N. Y. 405 ; Moore v. Gadsden, supra; Rainey v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 68
Third. Even if the ordinance imposed a duty on the owner which affords a cause of action to the person injured through his omission to comply therewith, yet the failure of the owner to erect the shed was not the proximate cause of the injury. The accident would not have occurred but for the negligence of the employees of Zimmermann, as found by the jury. It was Zimmermann’s duty to perform his contract with care and to safeguard the work, to the end that people lawfully upon the street would not receive injury. He was aware that there was no protection below, and he was under no obligation to proceed with the work if he could not do it safely, but, manifestly, it could have been done with entire safety.
The owner merely failed to take a precaution required by the ordinance to protect pedestrians against the possible negligence of others. ' This is not a case where the work, even if properly done, creates a peril unless guarded against. The negligence which caused the injuries was neither necessarily incidental to the execution of the contract nor contemplated by the parties. Although the omission of the owner to comply with the ordinance may have been a remote cause, it is manifest that the intervening negligence of the contractor was the direct and proximate cause of the injuries, and in these circumstances the owner would not be liable. (Laidlaw v. Sage, 158 N. Y. 73 ; Storey v. Mayor, 29 App. Div, 316; Carter v. Towne, 98 Mass. 567; Scheffer v. Railroad Company, 105 U. S. 249; Ray Neg. Imp. Dut. Pas. Car. 669, 670.) It follows that no cause of action was established against the owner, and the complaint should have been dismissed as to him.
Fourth. It is expressly conceded for the purposes of this appeal in the points of the appellant Zimmermann that freedom from negligence on the part of the decedent was shown, and that under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur there was sufficient evidence to sustain
The widow testified, without objection, that on the night of the fifteenth of September her husband was “all night like out of his mind,” and walked up and down the floor, hitting his head, saying, “ Oh, my head! ” at one time saying: “ There is something sticking up here; don’t you see it ? cut it away,” and then would lie down and be quiet for a while, and then would jump up again; that early in the morning, after being in bed and asleep, he got up, dressed and broke away from her while she was endeavoring • to restrain him, and went out upon the street. In the early morning of that day he was brought into the Roosevelt Hospital drenching wet, in an unconscious state, and was treated for “ submersion.” He recovered from these symptoms, and for several days subsequently he was at times violently delirious, and at other times simply irrational, and in about five days he developed an “ acute lobar pneumonia,” and died on the fourth day of October, . The hospital physician testified that death was due to pneumonia and chronic alcoholism.
It is not disputed that death resulted from pneumonia, and the jury were so instructed. There was no testimony of an eye witness as to where decedent was or what happened to him between the time he left his house on the morning of the sixteenth of September and the time he was brought to the hospital. Considerable hearsay testimony on that subject "was, however, brought into the case by counsel for appellant Zimmermann. The decedent’s physician testified on cross-examination that he was told by the widow that her husband jumped into the Horth river from the dock at the foot of Fifty-seventh street while insane; that he was taken out of the water and started on the street, where he was subsequently arrested, taken to the station house, ánd from there to the hospital.
Three physicians Called by the appellant gave it as their opinion, in answer to a hypothetical question assuming as a fact that decedent thus jumped or fell into the river and suffered from- immersion, that his death was caused by pneumonia, and that the pneumonia was caused by the immersion and not by the injury.
If the injury directly caused the insanity, and the pneumonia was produced by the decedent’s own act while insane, there may be room for argument, upon the facts in this case, that it was too remote from the negligent act to hold the appellant responsible
Assuming, without deciding, that the appellant would be liable for the decedent’s death produced from pneumonia brought upon himself while insane if the insanity was directly caused by the injuries, still the verdict cannot be sustained, for the evidence is entirely insufficient to establish insanity, or that the decedent’s jumping or falling into the river or otherwise getting wet was owing thereto.
I think that the rule stated in the insurance cases involving suicide, as to what constitutes insanity, may be properly applied here. The rule adopted in those cases, where the companies are not responsible if the insured “ die by his own hand,” is that there is no liability unless the^ipsured was so’‘mentally disordered as not to understand that the act he committed would cause his death, or committed it under the influence of some insane impulse which he could not resist,' although knowing the consequences, it not being sufficient that his mind was so impaired that he was not conscious of the moral "obliquity of the act. (Van Zandt v. Mut. Benefit Life Ins. Co., 55 N. Y. 169 ; Newton v. Mut. Benefit Life Ins. Co., 76 id. 426 ; Meacham v. N. Y. State Mut. Benefit Assn., 46 Hun, 364; S. C., 120 N. Y. 237.)
If decedent jumped into the river and at that time his reasoning faculties were so impaired that he was unable to understand the nature, effect and consequence of the act, or if -he was impelled thereto by an uncontrollable impulse, then doubtless he was an irresponsible agent and insane. So, likewise, if he fell into the river while wandering about in that condition of mind, it could not be said to be his own act. (Whart. Neg. §§ 87, 88; American Life Ins. Co. v. Isett’s Admr., 74 Penn. St. 176; Worthington & Co. v. Mencer, 96 Ala. 310.)
Sanity, however, is presumed, even as to a person who takes his own life, and the burden was upon the plaintiff of establishing decedent’s irresponsibility; and acts and incidents which are as consistent with sanity as with insanity will not warrant the submission of the question to the jury. (3 Joyce Ins. § 2640; 4 id. 3773; 2 Biddle on Insurance, § 842; Weed v. Mut. Benefit Life Ins. Co. 35 N. Y. Super. Ct. 386; S. C., 41 id. 476; S. C., 70 N. Y. 561; Coffey v. Home Life Ins. Co., 35 N. Y. Super. Ct. 314.)
The hearsay testimony with reference to decedent’s falling or .jumping, into the river and being insane at the time is not' evidence • nor do we think the appellant was estopped, by drawing it forth, from excepting to its being submitted to the jury as such. But if he were estopped, the facts and circumstances under which the decedent got into the water are not disclosed even by the hearsay testimony. The evidence of the widow indicates that decedent was in a high state of mental excitement at the time he left the house, but, as there is no satisfactory evidence of previous insanity, that is insufficient to warrant a finding that he became and continued irresponsible. He may have fallen into the water through his own carelessness and he may have jumped in through fright or an error of judgment or to avoid apprehended danger, as well as from other motives, while, mentally responsible within the rules stated ; and in either case, manifestly, the appellant would not be liable for the conse^ quences. (Raymond v. Haverhill, 168 Mass. 382 ; Meyer v. King, 12 Miss. 1.) The jury were not justified in finding that- he was impelled into the water by an insane impulse, or that he did not, at the time, possess sufficient reason to understand the consequences or to be capable o 1 exercising care for his own safety, and, there: fore, appellants’ exceptions were well taken.
The judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellants to abide the event.
Van Brunt, Pi J., and Patterson, J., concurred ; O’Brien, J.,. dissented.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, with costs to appellants -to abide event.