207 A.D. 680 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1924
The defendant, at the time of the happening of the accident to the plaintiff, was engaged in the construction of five houses. There was no general contractor. The work of constructing1 the
The decision of the court below evidently was based upon a general statement in Joyce v. Convent Avenue Construction Co. (155 App. Div. 586), which reads as follows: “It is now well settled that the owner of premises who contracts for the erection of a building thereon owes no duty of active vigilance to protect the employees of one contractor from the negligence of those of another, and that to the employees of the various contractors the only liability on the part of the owner in such case is for some affirmative act of negligence on his part, as by taking some part in the performance of the work other than such general supervisión as is necessary to insure its performance in accordance with the contract.”
The point decided in that case was that the sheet iron upon which the plaintiff stepped and was injured had not been in place sufficiently long to enable the marble tread to be placed upon it when the plaintiff stepped upon .it aRd was injured. The court clearly did not intend to absolve the owner from all liability to and duty towards the employees of the contractor in such a situation, for the portion of the opinion above quoted is followed by this statement: “ The recovery was had on the theory of common-law liability, and, as has been seen, there is no evidence that the defendant had either actual or constructive notice of the condition in which the step was at the time the plaintiff attempted to use it, and, therefore, no question is presented for decision with respect to the liability of the defendant if it did have such notice in time to have remedied the defect or under any statute.”
The evidence in this case would have permitted the jury to find
The judgment should be reversed upon the law and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Kelly, P. J., Manning, Young and Kapper, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed upon the law and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.