133 N.Y.S. 107 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
Lead Opinion
On the 11th day of August, 1908, Delancey street on both sides of its intersection with Eldridge street had been excavated for the- construction of the subway loop of the Williamsburg Bridge, and a temporary carriageway had been constructed over the excavation on timbers which also supported a gas main owned by the Consolidated Gas Company. Temporary manholes affording access to the gas main had been made at intervals and they were inclosed on the surface of the streets by rectangular fences formed by four upright pieces of timber to which two boards were nailed on each of the four sides. One of these- manholes was just easterly of the intersection of the said streets and another was a short distance westerly of said intersection. The plaintiff was in the employ of the Consolidated Gas Company and -it was his duty to inspect the main at these manholes for leaks. A truck hauling a steel girder which was to be used in the subway construction work broke through
The jury were warranted in finding that the shackle spread owing to the fact that the bolt was not secured at all by a nut or otherwise, or that an attempt was made to secure it by screwing a nut on only part way, so that .when the strain came the threads of the bolt were stripped letting the nut off.
The evidence was sufficient to require the submission to the jury of the question as to whether the plaintiff was free from contributory negligence, and whether there was negligence on the part of those doing the work, and was sufficient to sustain the verdict of' the jury on those issues. The defendant, however, denied liability for the acts from which the plaintiff suffered the injury, and contended that the men doing the
The party of the first part, being the defendant herein, obligated itself upon obtaining any contract for work of the description in that part of the contract already quoted, to “turn over the constructive or erective part of said contract to the party of the second part, and to pay the said party of the second part fo|: the said erective or constructive work, as the same progresses, the actual cost to said second party of the said work latpor and services (except services and labor of superintendents), said cost to be. arrived at by taking the aggregate weekly payrolls of the party of the second part and liquidating tljte same in weekly payments, and that in addition thereto the
It was further agreed that the party of the second part, being the Metropolitan Bridge and Construction Company, was to hire and pay all employees on the work and- the salaries of the necessary superintendents, and to- immediately pay and discharge any mechanics’ liens filed against the work; and that the party of the first part, being the defendant herein, should furnish all materials and deliver the same to the party of the second part, and that the contract should continue for five years, but might be sooner terminated by either party on two weeks’notice in writing. The defendant also proved a'formal notice in writing given by it to the Metropolitan-Bridge and Construction Company under said agreement submitting plans,' specifications, details and drawings for the steel for its contract for this subway work, and calling upon the Metropolitan Bridge and Construction Company to do the work pursuant ’.'to said agreement; and the acknowledgment in writing from the Metropolitan Bridge and Construction Company of the receipt of said notification containing a promise on its part to proceed with the work. The secretary of the Metropolitan Bridge and Construction Company had formerly been a stenographer in the defendant’s employ, and the only office the Metropolitan Bridge and' Construction Company had was desk room in the office qf the defendant. Triest testified that neither he nor the defendant had anything to do with the incorporation of the Metrqpolitan Bridge and Construction Company so far as he knewj; but he was subsequently asked whether it was not a fact thsjit the Metropolitan Bridge and Construction Company “wals organized and fostered and got together by Snare & Triesit Company, ” and after an objection that the question wap
The. Appellate Division in the Second Department in McCherry v. Snare & Triest Co. (130 App. Div. 241; affd. without opinion, 198 N. Y. 532), by a divided, court held on facts-somewhat different from those now before the court with respect to the same or alike contract between defendant and the Metropolitan Bridge and Construction Company, that the question of which of the companies was doing the work was one of fact for the jury. Very likely that was also a question of fact in the case at bar; but it cannot be said that the contention of the defendant that it was not doing the work was made in bad faith, or that its claim was without merit. We are of opinion that the learned trial court erred in permitting the witness Reeves to testify that he was employed by defendant. The defendant being a corporation, he should have been permitted to state only the name of the individual who employed him and what position, if any, if he knew, such person held with defendant. It appearing that he was paid and receipted for his pay in the name of the Metropolitan Company his opinion that he was working for the defendant was not competent evidence for the consideration of the jury in deciding the question of fact as to who was his employer and responsible for his acts.
The court instructed the jury that if the men engaged in this work were not in the employ of the defendant that would end the case, and that the defendant was not responsible for the negligence of the employees of another. The attention of the
At the close of the charge the defendant duly excepted to the instruction of the court to the effect that Beeves was in charge of the work of moving- the girder, whereupon the court remarked: “I did not mean to say that he was. I merely meant to call the jury’s attention to the fact that he swore he was. The credibility of the witnesses is for the jury.”
Counsel for the defendant excepted to this modification, and also to that part of the charge wherein the court referred to the contract as a mere piece of paper, and requested the court to instruct the jury that the contract expressed the contractual relations between the parties, to which the court replied: “So charged. When I say it is a piece of paper, I mean, of course, merely that that is all any contract is; that is the expression of the contract in writing; that the actual manner in which the work was done supersedes the written language of the paper.”
Counsel for the defendant excepted to this modification, and also to the charge “that the contract is a peculiar contract,” to which the court said: .“I didn’t mean that it is a peculiar contract; it is an unusual contract. I ask the jury particularly to read the contract, to take it with them into the jury room, and read it over very carefully.”
Counsel for the defendant also excepted to the charge that it was for the jury to determine whether the Metropolitan Bridge and Construction Company was doing the work through the instrumentality of the defendant or its agents, and" thereupon specifically called the court’s attention to the part of the
■ We are of opinion that the jury were permitted under the charge of the learned trial court to give too great importance to the question as to. whether or not the contract between the defendant and the Metropolitan Company was made in good faith. The issue to be determined by the jury was .not whether the defendant was instrumental in having the Metropolitan Bridge and Construction Company incorporated, or what its motive or purpose was in sub-letting part of the work to that company, or whether the contract between them was made in good faith. The Metropolitan Bridge and Construction Company, in so far as appears by this record, was a duly organized corporation, and it was perfectly competent for the defendant to sub-let the whole or part of the work to it. The important question to be determined by the jury was, whose servants were these men who were guilty of the acts of negligence which resulted in the injuries to the plaintiff. It was quite Immaterial whether the Metropolitan Bridge and Construction Company was organized in good or bad faith, or whether the contract between the defendant and it was made in good or bad faith. It was competent for the Metropolitan Bridge and Construction Company to employ these men to do this work, and if it did employ them and was-paying them for their services the defendant is not responsible for their acts. As has been seen, the court instructed the jury that, “As a matter of fact, the work, to all intents and purposes, was being
It follows, therefore, that the judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Ingraham, P. J., and Scott, J., concurred; McLaughlin and Miller, JJ., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
The Metropolitan Bridge and Construction Company was a duly organized corporation. The ulterior object of its incorporators was not an issue in this action. The purpose for which the corporation was formed is set out in the certificate of incorporation, and is not open to collateral attack. It may be assumed that the holders of the stock of the Snare & Triest Company organized the bridge and construction compapy for the sole purpose of relieving the Triest Company from liability in case of accidents by subletting to it a part or all of contracts taken, but this assumption does not aid the defendant. The statute gave them the right to form a corporation for the purpose of doing the things set out in the certificate of incorporation. Once the corporation was duly formed and was acting within its corporate powers, it is of no consequence what was
I do not find any errors committed at the trial, sufficient to justify a reversal of the judgment..
I concur, therefore, in the conclusion reached by Mr. Justice Miller that the judgment and order should be affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
I agree with Mr. Justice Laughlin that the evidence is sufficient- to sustain the verdict,. both as to plaintiff’s freedom from negligence and the negligence of those doing the work which caused his injury, but I differ with him as to the other issue in the case.
There is no doubt that in form the workmen were employed and paid by the Metropolitan Bridge and Construction Company, which on paper was an independent contractor. There was no question for the jury, unless they were at liberty to find that the paper transaction was a mere subterfuge, and that the employees in form of the Metropolitan Company were in fact doing the work of the defendant, under its direction and control. • In that view 'it was of little consequence that. Beeves was allowed to state his .conclusion that he was in the defendant’s employ, precisely as the defendant’s witnesses stated their conclusion.
The plaintiff’s evidence in chief was at least sufficient to
The defendant, as the record shows, was engaged in very important construction work involving considerable risk of accident claims. It contracted to sublet the “constructive or erective ” part of the work on all contracts, which it might obtain, to another corporation, organized by its employees, under conditions which did not require of its sub-contractor the possession of a dollar of capital. It is a reasonable inference that the latter had such capital as its business required, i. e., “ desk room ” in the defendant’s office and the said contract. Its five per cent commission was doubtless enough to pay the salaries of its superintendents and officers, also employees of the defendant. It is taxing credulity too much to expect one. to believe that in making that contract the defendant had any purpose except to interpose the barrier of another corporation between it and liability to third persons, while in fact retaining control of the execution of its contracts.' If that purpose has been achieved, an effective method ,of insuring against, or, to be accurate, of evading, such liability has been discovered.
While it would seem that the plaintiff might. have elicited, even from the -enemy, more direct evidence on the question, such evidence as there is, in connection with said contract, irresistibly leads to the conclusion that, though -in form the defendant had sublet the work, it was, to all intents and purposes, doing it itself; that, though on paper there was a subcontractor, in truth and in fact the defendant did its work by
The question then is resolved into one of law. Can a corporation take advantage of its impalpable nature to divest itself of responsibility for, while retaining control of, its undertakings, by the stratagem of a mere paper contract with another invisible creature having the same agents? Of course, the defendant would not have made such a contract unless its own and its nominal contractor’s agents were the same. To have actually sublet its work to a mere .paper corporation would have involved too great risk of damages for breaches of its contracts. The last statement involves an inference which I think justified by the record, but which is not necessary to the point to be decided. The more general rule, of course, is that one is not liable to third persons for the acts of ah independent contractor, but the test of non-liability is that the employer shall be concerned only in the result of the work, and shall not retain control of the manner and means of doing it. If one in fact employs an independent contractor to do a piece of work; in other words, if he surrenders control of the maimer and means of doing it, he is not ordinarily liable to strangers for what his independent contractor does, even though the latter be irresponsible. There is in that case not an evasion of responsibility, but a devolution of responsibility from one to the other. But if the contractor be independent on paper only, if his employment be a mere subterfuge to enable his employer to evade responsibility,, while the latter in fact retains full control of the enterprise, can there be any. doubt that the law will go beyond the paper device and fix responsibility upon the one in fact exercising control ? The maxim respondeat superior is applied to make people answerable for the conduct of them own affairs. Liability is imposed on the one exercising or having the power to exercise selection and control. The principle applies alike to both artificial and natural persons.' It is easier of application to the latter because they can be seen; but certainly
As has been shown, the defendant did its work by the same' visible agencies as it would have used had there been no paper' subcontract and no Metropolitan Bridge and Construction Company. The jury were justified in finding that, the latter was only nominally employed to enable the defendant to escape liability for accident claims, and that the defendant actually controlled all the visible means used. Has the invisible entity, the creature existing only in' contemplation.of law, the legal fiction, sufficient substance to screen the defendant from liability ? A natural person cannot evade his legal responsibilities by hiding behind another. ■ Surely courts and juries should be able to see beyond an invisible screen. Two or more per-. sons may form a corporation for the very purpose of conducting a business in an organized capacity so as to limit the risk of - loss to the capital invested; there is in that case not an attempt to evade responsibility, but a substitution of corporate- for individual liability, which the law allows. The joint capital contributed becomes a trust fund for the protection of the public. Notwithstanding the safeguards imposed bylaw, that' capital-may not always be sufficient. But it by no means follows that one corporate organization may be used by another as a device to evade responsibility; that one corporation may be organized to supply the capital and derive the benefits, and another, without capital, to take the responsibility and risk. I think that, upon the proof in this case, the second invisible entity and the subterfuge of a paper sub-contract with it may be disregarded,' and ,that the one for whose benefit, and under whose actual control the work was done, may be held directly responsible upon the application of the maxim respondeat superior.
While the discussion did not take quite the same turn, the same state of facts was involved in McCherry v. Snare & Triest Co. (130 App. Div. 241), and a judgment against this defendant was unanimously affirmed by the Court of Appeals (198 N. Y. 532).
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Judgment. and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event,