8 A.D.2d 976 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1959
In an action by an employee of Sterling Foundations, Inc., the general contractor of a construction project, to recover damages for personal injuries against inter alla, the City of New York, the owner of the land on which the construction was being made, the city served a third-party complaint for judgment over against Sterling Foundations, Inc., alleging that Sterling was actively negligent and that it had agreed to indemnify the city. The court dismissed the city’s cross complaint against defendant-respondent, Gerosa Crane Service Co., and also dismissed the third-party complaint, and the jury rendered a verdict for $47,000 in favor of the employee against the city. The city appeals, as limited by its brief, from so much of a resettled judgment entered thereon as is in favor of the plaintiff-respondent against it and as dismisses the third-party complaint. Judgment insofar as appealed from reversed, and a new trial granted as between plaintiff-respondent and defendant-appellant and the third-party plaintiff-appellant and the third-party defendant-respondent, with costs to abide the event. The plaintiff-respondent was an employee of Sterling, the general contractor on a construction project for the installation of a pumping room in the subway system formerly operated by appellant. Plain tiff-respondent claimed that appellant’s representative directed him to cut a beam at a place inside a barricade, erected on appellant’s land, in order to shield the work from the public throughfare while the work was progressing. This place, it was further claimed, was adjacent to an upright clamshell bucket resting on its bottom inside the barricade with its cables attached to a crane outside the barricade. The proof in part showed that as plaintiff-respondent was cutting the beam, the bucket tumbled over and crushed him, inflicting the injuries complained of. The crane operator, a fellow servant, testified that as the said respondent was at work the crane was in the process of being swung over the barricade at Sterling’s direction and that in the process the cable was shortened, which caused the bucket to tip over. In our opinion, it was proper, under the circumstances of this case, for the learned Trial Justice to submit to the jury the issues as to whether appellant’s representative had the authority to make the direction claimed to have been given, as to whether, such direction