Ramon Vargas, Respondent, v New York City Transit Authority, Respondent-Appellant. New York City Transit Authority, Third-Party Plaintiff-Respondent-Appellant, v Halmar Builders of New York, Third-Party Defendant-Appellant-Respondent. Granite Halmar Construction Company, Inc., Formerly Known as Halmar Builders of New York, Inc., Second Third-Party Plaintiff-Appellant-Respondent, v Grand Mechanical Corp. et al., Second Third-Party Defendants-Respondents, and Atlantic Rolling Steel Door Corp., Second Third-Party Defendant-Respondent-Appellant.
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, First Department
February 19, 2008
863 N.Y.S.2d 426
Janice Bowman, J.; Barry Salman, J.
The subject incident occurred in the course of the construction of a bus maintenance facility owned by NYCTA. Granite, the project‘s general contractor, hired Grand Mechanical as the HVAC subcontractor. Grand Mechanical hired Miller Proctor to commission, or start up, the facility‘s boilers. In March 2001, after the boilers had been commissioned, Grand Mechanical called Miller Proctor to address a leak in one of them. Plaintiff, the Miller Proctor employee sent to respond to the call, alleges that, because his employer did not provide him with a ladder, and no others were available at the site, he borrowed one from employees of Atlantic, the project‘s rolling door subcontractor. Plaintiff further alleges that, because the A-frame ladder provided by Atlantic, when opened, was not tall enough to enable him to reach the top of the boiler, he climbed the ladder while it was closed and leaning on the spherical boiler. Plaintiff was injured when the ladder collapsed while he was climbing it in this fashion.
As plaintiff does not challenge the dismissal of his cause of action under
Regarding the third-party claims, the record establishes that NYCTA is entitled to contractual indemnification and defense from Granite, and that Granite is entitled to contractual indemnification and defense from Grand Mechanical, in each case pursuant to the plain terms of the applicable written agreement between the two parties. Since the record contains no evidence that plaintiff‘s injuries resulted from negligence on the part of either NYCTA or Granite, there is no statutory bar to enforcement of these indemnity agreements. We note, however, that Granite‘s claim for indemnity and breach of contract against Miller Proctor was correctly dismissed, since Granite and Miller Proctor were not in contractual privity with each other, and the purchase orders constituting the agreements between Grand Mechanical and Miller Proctor do not make Granite a third-party beneficiary thereof, nor do such agreements incorporate by reference the terms of the subcontract between Granite and Grand Mechanical. We reject Grand Mechanical‘s argument that plaintiff‘s injuries did not arise from Grand Mechanical‘s work for the project, since the record establishes that Miller Proctor sent plaintiff to the work site at Grand Mechanical‘s request, pursuant to the purchase orders between Grand Mechanical and Miller Proctor. Since Grand Mechanical has not taken an appeal, we are without power to grant its request that its cross claim against Miller Proctor be reinstated in the event we reinstate Granite‘s third-party claim against Grand Mechanical (see Hecht v City of New York, 60 NY2d 57 [1983]). We note that no argument has been advanced in favor of the viability of a claim for common-law indemnity or contribution against Miller Proctor, which appears to be immunized from such liability by
After Grand Mechanical was impleaded into the action, NYCTA asserted cross claims against it for contractual defense and indemnity and for breach of contract, the latter based on Grand Mechanical‘s alleged failure to procure contractually required insurance coverage for NYCTA. We agree with NYCTA‘s argument that Supreme Court erred in dismissing these cross claims against Grand Mechanical. The subcontract between Granite and Grand Mechanical expressly incorporated by reference the terms of the prime contract between NYCTA and Granite and made Granite‘s obligations under the prime
Finally, Atlantic was entitled to dismissal of all claims against it. The record establishes that Atlantic, the rolling door subcontractor, was not in contractual privity with plaintiff‘s employer, that it had no supervision, direction or control over plaintiff‘s work, and that it had no duty to provide him with equipment adequate for the performance of his work. Accordingly, plaintiff‘s injuries did not arise from Atlantic‘s work, and were not caused by any fault attributable to Atlantic.
Concur—Tom, J.P., Saxe, Friedman, Buckley and Catterson, JJ.
