CHARLES MCCOY et al., Appellants, v METROPOLITAN TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY et al., Respondents.
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department
June 16, 2005
38 A.D.3d 308 | 832 N.Y.S.2d 26
The motion court correctly dismissed the claims against defendants Metropolitan Transportation Authority and Metro North Commuter Railroad for common-law negligence and under
We disagree with the view that these other three proffered provisions of the
These provisions are not rendered inapplicable as a matter of law simply because the accident occurred while the beam was being propelled in a forward direction, having already been lifted a foot off the ground. When a crane is being used to move a large, heavy or unwieldy item from one spot to another, the term “hoisting” should not be read so narrowly as to apply only to the part of the process in which the item is being moved in an upward direction, and to preclude the part of the operation when the load, having been lifted upward, is being propelled horizontally. There is little logic to the idea that the Code would require a tag or restraint line to protect workers and others from the rotation or swinging of a load, but only when the load
Nor do the relied-upon cases support such a reading. In Biafora v City of New York (27 AD3d 506, 508 [2006]), the plaintiff was injured by a bucket that had been dragged along the ground until the cable connected to the bucket accidentally lifted it off the ground, whereupon it hit the plaintiff; the Court merely observed that under the alleged facts, any violations of the safe hoisting provisions were not a proximate cause of the accident. In Penta v Related Cos. (286 AD2d 674, 675 [2001], lv denied 100 NY2d 515 [2003]), the plaintiff was hit by a hook that swung free after a load of wood was unhooked from the crane; the Court held that
The amendment of plaintiffs’ bill of particulars therefore should have included each of the five claimed
Tom, J.P., and Buckley, J., dissent in part in a memorandum by Tom, J.P., as follows: Plaintiff, an employee of the general contractor, sustained serious injury when he was run over by a mobile hydraulic forklift, known as a Gradall. The machine was being used to transport a three-foot-high, 20-foot-long steel beam from a construction area to a scrap heap. Plaintiff was walking in front of the machine steadying the right end of the beam, which was suspended about one foot off the ground, as a coworker steadied the opposite end. When the Gradall operator stopped for a traffic light, the beam rotated and plaintiff was pushed backward toward the machine. When the light turned green, the Gradall lurched forward, crushing plaintiff‘s legs under the front wheel.
Supreme Court correctly found that
I agree that Supreme Court properly declined to impose liability on the owners under
Accordingly, the order should be affirmed.
