267 Pa. 368 | Pa. | 1920
Opinion by
Plaintiff sues on an indemnity contract wherein defendant covenanted to provide proper, necessary and sufficient precautions, safeguards and protections against the happening of any accident during the progress of the work in connection with the repair of appellant’s bureau of information at Broad street station, Philadelphia, and to indemnify plaintiff from the payment of any sum of money by reason of such accident. During the progress of the work in 1902, an intending passenger tripped over a piece of granite used in connection therewith and was injured. Averring
We may assume the contract of defendant, under which the work was done, was within the terms of the first contract containing the indemnity clause, but such clause did not make defendant an insurer as to any accident that might happen in the course of the work, it related only to such as occurred through failure to provide proper, necessary and sufficient safeguards in and about the work. The parties adopted for their rule of conduct the common acceptation of the meaning of the term negligence — lack of ordinary care under the circumstances. To charge defendant with liability, it was not enough to show that the indemnitee paid out money on account of an accident happening in connection with the work, but it must appear that the accident occurred through the failure of the indemnitor to provide sufficient safeguards; — in other words, negligence or the failure to use care by the indemnitor, his agent, employees or subcontractor: Flynn v. Phila., 199 Pa. 476; Morton v. Union Traction Co., 20 Pa. Superior Ct. 325;, Perry v. Payne, 217 Pa. 252. Such is the intent of the language of the contract.
At common law the indemnitor in performing the work was liable to a stranger, lawfully about the premises, for an injury occasioned through his negligence. The indemnitee or owner may likewise be liable to its invitees to whom it owed the same duty, or reasonable care. This contract, as between the parties, rose no higher than to secure protection to the indemnitee from loss in paying money on account of the violation of those duties, but the indemnitor’s liability to the indemnitee arises on a breach of the contract which would be a breach of the duty as to third persons written in the contract; and the injury must be fairly within the contemplation of the terms of the contract: 22 Cyc. 86. The
The indemnitee charges that it paid money under compulsion of law for acts fairly within the terms of the indemnity contract. The work was not done by defendant but was let to a subcontractor, whose servants, it is charged, caused the accident. Plaintiff offered the record of the former suit, contending that it was prima facie evidence of defendant’s liability. Had plaintiff given notice to the indemnitor in time sufficient for it to have prepared its case, defendant might have been bound by the former judgment: Byers’s Est., 205 Pa. 66.
Notice was given to William Gray & Sons, the subcontractors, who were directly responsible for the negligence which caused the accident. They were advised that they would be held liable for the accident occurring to Marie Brolasky and were recognized as the contractors doing the work. It was not an attempt to notify
Judgment affirmed.