28 Barb. 196 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1858
The judge at the circuit, among other things, charged the jury that if an owner of a building contracts with another to raise a roof to his house, and in that work a derrick is employed, extending over a sidewalk which is a great thoroughfare, where many persons are continually or frequently passing, and that derrick was necessarily so extended, or it was known to the owner that it was so extended, or would be extended, then it was the duty of the owner to cause a barricade to be placed to prevent persons passing by, or to place a person there to give warning to the persons passing, and for the omission of such duty the owner is liable as for his own neglect. To which charge the defendant’s counsel excepted.
In this charge I think the learned judge erred.. The general rule is, that where the work is done under a contract, and the injury occurs from the act or negligence of the servants of the contractor, and not those of the owner, the owner is not responsible. (Blake v. Ferris, 1 Selden, 48. Pack v. The Mayor &c. of New York, 4 id. 222. Kelly v. Mayor of New York, 1 Kern. 432. Norton v. Wiswall, 26 Barb. 618.) There are exceptions to the general rule, where the work or erection is itself a nuisance, or where the injury was itself a necessary result of the contract, and in some other cases not material to be noticed. (Stevens v. Armstrong, 2 Selden, 436. City of Buffalo v. Holloway, 3 id. 493. Mayor of New York v. Bailey, 2 Denio, 442. Congreve v. Morgan, 5 Duer, 495.) This particular erection was not complained of as a nuisance, nor
In a subsequent part of the charge, the learned judge seems to have fallen into the same error, and to have prescribed precisely the same means of warning as the only ones that could admonish the passer by of danger; and he expressly charges that the individual passing may assume that it is safe for him. to pass, unless he is notified to the contrary in one or the other of the two modes above referred to. I can only repeat that this seems to me to confine the proof of the absence of negligence within too narrow a compass. I do not know that in point of fact it was pretended that any other special means than those thus specifically referred to by the court were resorted
Davies, Sutherland and Hogeboom, Justices.]
There are other questions in the case deserving of consideration, but I have not thought it necessary to pursue them. If I am right in the view thus far taken, there must be a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event. And I am of opinion that justice requires that such direction should be given to the case.