278 A.D. 673 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1951
. In an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiffs, judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants affirmed, with costs. Plaintiffs, husband and wife, and tenants of defendants’ multiple dwelling house in the borough of Queens, city of New York, were injured as the result of an explosion in an incinerator in the building. Plaintiff Raymond A. Pettingill had scraped the floors of his apartment and, in accordance with a direction given him by the superintendent of the building, he dumped the floor scrapings into the incinerator shaft opening on the floor of his apartment, the third floor. At just about the moment of completion of this chore, an explosion took place which propelled the incinerator hopper against his body, and flames were emitted from the shaft, burning both plaintiffs. The negligence claimed by plaintiffs was faulty construction and maintenanóe of the incinerator. Although we find no evidence of such negligence in the record, and the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur is not applicable (Matlinchy v. Christianson, 192 Minn. 166), the trial court charged, in effect, that negligence on the part of defendants could be founded on the latter’s violation of subdivision d of section C26 — 701.0 of the Administrative Code of the City of New York (Local Laws, 1942, No. 24 of City of New York), which, in part, required the posting of certain notices, in prescribed language, to serve as warning against inflammables. This subdivision also states that the throwing of floor scrapings and other inflammable and highly combustible substances into an incinerator is unlawful. The court also charged that it had been conceded that no signs in the particular prescribed wording had been posted. The defendants did not take exception to this part of the charge. The prime purpose of the statute was to protect against injury to persons and property, including plaintiffs, and the basic obligation was that of the defendants, as owners and agent of the building, to post the prescribed notices. In our opinion, the throwing of the scrapings into the incinerator may not be asserted by the defendants as contributory negligence. The situation is not unlike the ease of a window cleaner who disobeyed the statutory proscription against cleaning windows from the outside of a public building which, in violation of statute, did not have certain equipment and safety devices. (Section 202 of the Labor Law prior to repeal in 1942 [L..1942, ch. 824].) The defense