155 N.E. 579 | NY | 1927
The claimant, Antonio Filitti, was employed by the Lerode Homes Corporation in constructing a brick building at 43 to 47 Seventy-fourth street, Brooklyn. He was a general laborer, and on the tenth day of October, 1925, was digging a hole in which to put an iron beam. While bending over at his work, he was struck by a piece of cornice which fell from the adjoining building, an apartment house, No. 39 Seventy-fourth street. No work was being done by the contractors on this apartment house. The claimant was digging alongside the apartment house which was on the lot next to the place where he was working. The cornice, therefore, was almost directly above him.
The Appellate Division has dismissed the claim made for compensation under the Workmen's Compensation Law, holding on the authority of Matter of McCarter v. LaRock (
The McCarter case on this point was like Allcock v.Rogers (11 B.W.C.C. 149), where it was held that an employee injured in cleaning a plate on an outside door of a public house, and injured by a bomb dropped by an enemy aircraft, was not entitled to an award. There was no special danger attaching to the spot where the man was told to work.
The case before us is different in this very particular. The danger from the falling cornice attached to the spot where the claimant was at work; it was peculiar to the situation, and a risk which arose from working alongside or underneath a building; the wall might fall down (Thom v. Sinclair, 10 B.W.C.C. 220), or articles might fall from above (Matter of Bandassi v.Molla,
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and the award of the State Industrial Board reinstated, with costs in all courts.
CARDOZO, Ch. J., POUND, ANDREWS and LEHMAN, JJ., concur; KELLOGG, J., not sitting.
Ordered accordingly.