Brigid DULLARD, as Administratrix of the Estate of Hugh
Dullard, Deceased, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
The BERKELEY ASSOCIATES COMPANY and Murray Hill Properties,
Inc., 35 East 35th Street Corp., 175 West 12th Street
Company, Beatay Holding Corporation, Bernmark Company,
Skillman Avenue Construction Corporation, Lynn Realty
Corporation, Broadway Construction Corporation, The Cousins
Company, Stephen Perlbinder, Barton Mark Perlbinder, Bernard
West, William West, Martin Berger, Bruce Berger, Michael
Berger, Julius Perlbinder, Milton West, Lillian West,
Augusta Berger Danzig, and 400 Concrete Corp. and Perlbinder
Realty Corp., individually and as a joint venture,
Defendants and Third-Party Plaintiffs-Appellants-Appellees,
v.
CASTLE CONCRETE CORP., Third-Party Defendant-Appellant-Appellee.
Nos. 731-734, Dockets 78-7457, 78-7512, 78-7560 and 78-7561.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued April 11, 1979.
Decided Aug. 27, 1979.
John J. Wrenn, Larkin, Wrenn & Cumisky, New York City, for Berkeley Associates (defendants and third-party plaintiffs-appellants-appellees other than 400 Concrete Corporation).
Michael E. Shay, Langan & Levy, New York City, for defendant 400 Concrete Corp.
Mark J. Aaronson, Bower & Gardner, New York City, for third-party defendant-appellant Castle Concrete Corp.
Arthur N. Seiff, O'Dwyer & Bernstien, New York City (Frank Durkan, O'Dwyer & Bernstien, New York City, of counsel), for plaintiff-appellee.
Before OAKES, Circuit Judge, and PIERCE* and WERKER,* District Judges.
OAKES, Circuit Judge:
This is an appeal in a wrongful death diversity action from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Kevin T. Duffy, Judge, entered after a jury trial on October 3, 1978, and amended on October 10, 1978. The jury awarded plaintiff $630,000 for the wrongful death of her decedent, a construction foreman struck in the head by a falling "4 X 4" timber; $20,000 for his conscious pain and suffering; and $3,825.30 for funeral and hospital expenses, for a total judgment (including prejudgment interest) of $803,546.81. In a special verdict, the jury fixed the proportionate liability of the parties as follows: 39% With respect to the defendants and third-party plaintiffs. The Berkeley Associates Company аnd its various partners (hereinafter "Berkeley"), the owner and general contractor; 35% With respect to the defendant 400 Concrete Corporation ("400 Concrete"), which had contracted with Berkeley to perform the concrete superstructure work; and 26% With respect to the third-party defendant Castle Concrete Corporation ("Castle"), which had contracted with 400 Concrete to perform the work that 400 Concrete had agreed to perform for Berkeley. The court granted 400 Concrete's claim against Castle for indemnity of its 35% Share of liability but denied both Berkeley's claim against Castle for contractual indemnity of Berkeley's 39% Share and 400 Concrete's claim against Castle for indemnity of 400 Concrete's liability to indеmnify Berkeley. For the reasons that follow, we are unpersuaded by the several arguments raised on appeal except for the objection that the verdict was excessive.
Decedent, a labor foreman employed by Castle, was working on East 53rd Street adjoining the construction site for a high-rise building at the time of his death. Material for the construction was stored at several locations on that street and elsewhere, and appellants used a large crane to lift the material to the upper floors of the building under construction. Decedent was struck and killed by a piece of lumber (4 X 4 X 4') that fell from an undetermined source at least ten stories above ground level. At the time of the accident Castlе had stacked wood on the 29th and 31st floors, and there was some testimony that the piece of lumber fell from one of those floors. The appellants had not provided any overhead protection, or more specifically a sidewalk shed, in violation of the New York Labor law,1 nor did they have any effective system to warn endangered workers of fаlling objects.
Berkeley's argument that there is no diversity of jurisdiction is frivolous. When plaintiff commenced this suit, she was a citizen of Ireland. Defendants are citizens of the United States. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(2).
Castle and Berkeley maintain that the court incorrectly charged the jury that certain provisions of the New York Labor Law, See note 1 Supra, impose on the owner and general contractor the continuing duty to provide suitable overhead protection, as well as the nondelegable duty to provide reasonable safety to workers on the construction site. According to defendants, the position of the crane made it impossible to provide overhead protection and thus under New York law, Ortiz v. Uhl,
Castle also argues that plaintiff failed to establish a prima facie case of negligence against 400 Concrete.2 But the jury could have found that Barton Mark Perlbinder, an officer of 400 Concrete who in that capacity had signed the contract with Castle, was on the job site аlmost daily, including the morning of the accident; and that another officer was also on the job site during the months of the construction. Castle points out that these officers claimed to be on the site in their capacity as officers of Berkeley. But the jury might have disagreed in light of Perlbinder's signing of the Castle contract. Moreover, regardless of the degree of 400 Concrete's actual control and direction of Castle's work, it would appear that 400 Concrete, as a contractor, had a nondelegable duty to insure that its construction area was so "guarded . . . as to provide reasonable and adequate protection and safety to the persons employed therein," N.Y.Lab.Law § 241(6) (McKinney Cum.Supp. 1978); See Allen v. Cloutier Construction Corp.,
Appellants complain that the court erred in giving the jury a res ipsa loquitur instruction. All that the court did was to charge the jury that the law "permits but does not require" an inference of negligence against the person having exclusive control of an instrumentality that causes an accident if the accident would not ordinarily have occurred without negligence. This is a simple enough principle of circumstantial evidence and has none of the vice of creating a presumption of negligence that the mere incantation of the Latin phrase so often evokes (although in certain spеcial relationships, E. g., carrier/passenger, it is proper to shift the burden as a matter of policy, See W. Prosser, Handbook of the Law of Torts § 40 at 231 (4th ed. 1971)). One would suppose that a timber falling on a person's head from a high building was the quintessential "thing," at least it was in Baron Pollock's mind when he dropped the phrase onto the confused heads of the legal world in thе argument in Byrne v. Boadle, 2 H. & C. 722, 159 Eng.Rep. 299 (1863) (barrel of flour rolling out of window). After noting that Castle and 400 Concrete each contended that it was not in exclusive control of the instrumentality, the court instructed the jury that this was a question of fact. The court noted that as general contractor and owner, Berkeley was "in control of everything at the job site," and continued that the question then was whether Berkeley had exclusive control of the instrumentality.
Under New York law, these instructions were more than adequate, even overly generous to defendants, for New York permits a "thing to speak for itself" as a matter of inference even when plaintiff has not shown that the instrument was in the defendant's Exclusive control; the inference may be equally аpplicable to several persons if "they shared a common duty and there was no indication that any one of them in particular had actually caused the injury." De Witt Properties, Inc. v. City of New York,
Castle's agreement to indemnify 400 Concrete was for "any and all claims, losses, suits, damages, judgments, expenses, costs and charges of every nature and kind, both legal and otherwise, whether direct or indirect, by reason of personal injuries, death or property damage to any persons or others caused by, аrising out of or occurring in connection with the work provided under the terms of this contract," even if the "claims, suits, damages and judgments for personal injuries, death or property damage . . . be due to the active negligence or statutory liability" of 400 Concrete. 400 Concrete argues that this obliges Castle to indemnify 400 Concrete not only for the latter's own Tort liability, but also fоr its Contractual liability to indemnify a third party, Berkeley, for Berkeley's tort liability to plaintiff. We disagree. As the district court found, the plain terms of the contract indicate that Castle is liable to indemnify only for 400 Concrete's tort liability to third parties. If the parties had intended that this typically worded hold harmless agreement have the unusual legal effect of including 400 Concrete's Contractual liability to indemnify a third party, one would suppose that specific language would have been inserted to manifest that intent clearly. See Compagnie Nationale Air France v. Port of New York Authority,
Castle and Berkeley complain that the jury award of $20,000 for conscious pain and suffering was not suppоrtable in the record. We cannot agree. There Was evidence that plaintiff's decedent was partly conscious before his death. A police officer on the scene testified that when he saw decedent a few minutes after the accident, decedent "was still alive, he was breathing, and his arms were moving to a limited degree. He was just about uncоnscious."
We do agree with appellants, however, that the $630,000 jury verdict for wrongful death was excessive under New York law. In determining whether an award is excessive under that law, a federal court may not consider the amount of the prejudgment interest, in this case an additional $148,817.90, See Zaninovich v. American Airlines, Inc.,
This figure does not, of course, tаke into account decedent's overtime pay or future earning potential, or the family's loss of decedent's services, society, and parental guidance, See Spadaccini v. Dolan,
Plaintiff argues on appeal that a wrongful death award may be adjusted upward to reflect the probable effect of future inflation. New York law on this issue is not as clear as she supposes, however, Compare Theobald v. Grey Public Relations, Inc.,
With all these considerations in mind, we conclude that the judgment should not exceed $500,000 with appropriate interest. Although we acknowledge that the measure of damages is a complex factual determination involving a considerable measure of estimation which is largely entrusted to the jury's good sense, Bellows v. Smith,
Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court and order a new trial solely on the issue of damages; but we will withhold entry оf judgment for thirty days, within which time plaintiff-appellee may, if she chooses, file with the clerk of the district court a remittitur of all damages in excess of $500,000 (plus interest from the date of the accident). Plaintiff-appellee shall then file in the office of the clerk of this court a certified copy of the remittitur filed in the district court. If plaintiff-appellee files a rеmittitur, the judgment of the district court, less the amount remitted, will be affirmed; otherwise, as stated, the judgment will be reversed and a new trial solely on the issue of damages ordered. See Joiner Systems, Inc. v. AVM Corp.,
Judgment in accordance with opinion.
Notes
Lawrence W. Pierce and Henry F. Werker of the Southern District of New York, sitting by dеsignation
N.Y.Lab.Law §§ 2(3), 200(1), & 241(6) (McKinney Cum.Supp.1978); N.Y. Board of Standards & Appeals' Industrial Code, Rules 23-1.3, -1.5(a), -1.7(a), & -1.18
Castle makes this argument by virtue of its duty to indemnify 400 Concrete, as to which see Infra ; the latter does not dispute its liability here, its insurer apparently preferring to seek indemnity over against Castle
The June 25, 1979, edition of the Wall Street Journal at 40, cols. 3 & 4, sets forth the savings yields on a variety of investments. In general, investments in the principal amount of at least $1,000 can earn over 9% Interest, E. g., Treasury Notes (9%-9.4%); High Grade Corporate Bond Funds (7.9%-9.6%); Six Month Bank Certificates (8.873%-9% On minimum amount of $10,000). More speculative forms of investment, of course, may earn even higher yields
This amount was derived by applying the discount factor 1/(1 k i) n to the annuity of $15,704, where n = the year for which present value of income is sought and i = the interest rate. The discounted annuity for the first year is therefоre $15,704 X ( 1/1.07) or $14,677, for the second year $15,704 X 1/(1.07) 2 or $13,716, and so forth. The sum of the 27 yearly amounts, so derived, is approximately $188,250, the present value of $424,008. This method of discounting allows plaintiff to recover an amount approximately equivalent to the amount of salary that decedent would have contributed to his family over the course of his work life had he lived. It is not precisely equivalent because decedent was paid in weekly and not yearly installments. It also assumes that all taxes were paid prior to the contribution to the family
We note in passing that New York apparently does not require the reduction of a wrongful death award by the amount of the decedent's expected tax liability, See Cunningham v. Rederiet Vindeggen A/S,
Although we probably cannot consider the costs of litigation, including attorneys' fees, in passing on the excessiveness of the verdict, Zaninovich, supra,
