66 N.Y.S. 522 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
This action was brought to recover damages for personal injuries which it is alleged in the complaint were sustained by the plaintiff through the negligent acts of the defendants’ servants. The principal defense, and the only one requiring consideration upon this appeal, is, that the persons through whose negligence the plaintiff was injured were not servants of the defendants, but were those of an independent contractor who was employed by the defendants to do certain work and over whom they had no control or direction in the performance of that work. On.the trial of the action the complaint was dismissed on the ground that the relation of master and servant was not established between the defendants and the persons whose negligence caused the injury of which the plaintiff complained. The evidence established the following facts, viz.: The defendants
The question whether it was properly held as matter of law that O’Connor and his men were not the servants of the defendants is a close one, but under the definitions of an independent contractor, as given in adjudicated cases and the authorities upon the subject, we are of the opinion that the ruling of the court helow was right. Undoubtedly, one cannot shield himself under the doctrine of independent contractors by simply employing another person and giving him a general authority to procure others to assist in work which requires no care or skill or experience, but which is merely such as might be done by any person with sufficient physical strength. In this case, however, it would appear that the removal of this paper from one floor to another through hatchways and by means of the use of appliances adapted to that purpose, was something that required
Butler v. Townsend (126 N. Y. 105) was a case in which a staging or scaffolding was unskillfullv built by a person who was . employed for that purpose by the defendants. In an action to recover damages for the death' of a workman caused by the breaking of an unsafe plank which had been used in the scaffolding, it was shown that the defendants had made a contract with one Keno-van which included the erection of the staging or scaffolding and that he was paid therefor. It was held that while the persons who erected this staging were employed by the defendants, they were not in a legal sense, their servants; that one may be employed without being a servant and have an employer who nevertheless is not a master, and that the relation of master and servant must exist in order to maintain an action of this character. (King v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 66 N. Y. 181.) That seems to be the situation.
We are of opinion that in this case the relation of master and servant, which must exist to render a person liable for the negligence of another, was’not shown; that the defendants contracted for the work with a person who was apparently competent to perform it; that the negligence which resulted in the injury to the plaintiff was the negligence of the independent contractor or some one in his employ, and that the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., and O’Brien, J., concurred; Rumsey and McLaughlin, JJ., dissented.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. .