45 N.Y.S. 866 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
This action was brought to recover damages sustained by the plaintiff' by falling from a window and scaffold, he having been engaged in pursuing his occupation as painter upon a building of the defendant. The defendant was the owner of the premises known as 44 Atlantic dock, Brooklyn, and at the time of the accident the said building was under its control and charge. The building appears to have been used for the purpose of the storage of cotton, and on the 5th of September, 1892, the plaintiff, who was a painter by trade and employed by Fisher Brothers, painters and decorators, was sent by his “ boss ” to the building to work and was directed to receive orders from the superintendent of that building. Upon that day he went to the building and saw a sign “ Superintendent’s office upstairs.” He then went uj> one flight of stairs and saw a. door, upon which was printed the word “ office ; ” he went in and saw two men in the office, one sitting on one side and the other on the other side of a desk. He asked one of the men sitting at the desk whether he was the superintendent. The man answered yes,” whereupon the plaintiff told him he had been sent there by Fisher Brothers for painting. The man then took some keys and went with the plaintiff and opened the door of the storage house, after which he left the keys in the charge of the plaintiff. The ■ plaintiff thereupon went upstairs ■ with him and asked him how to get on the roof. The man. said “ come with me and I will show you.” He then took the plaintiff as far as the top floor of the building. He said “ wait one moment; it is dark and I will have to open one of these shutters.” He opened one and the plaintiff and he got on the roof. The plaintiff then asked him about fastening the scaffold, and be said, “ you ought to know if you are a painter.” The plaintiff replied, “ I will tie a rope around the beam and fasten it around,” and the man said “ that will do.” The plaintiff then asked him how about getting in and out of these windows
It,further appeared that on the seventh-of September the' plain-, tiff went tp work as, usual, and in the afternoon of that day he was-! working on the second storage house on the third story from the ground. ■ Mr. Fisher, his employer, came and called him off the scaffold. After Mr,- Fisher called" him he placed his foot upon the sill of the,window and his hands on the iron bar with the intention, of going in-. He tried to bend his knee to get underneath the bar* still holding the bar in his hand, when out came- the-bar and- backward the plaintiff fell. He had both legs on the sill and he drew-on the falls, but not on the bar to help himself in. As he fell with the bar he struck the scaffold, pushing it from the building,, and fell, to the ground. For the damages sustained by'this fall this action was brought.. Upon the trial, after the -termination of the plaintiff’s;; case, the complaint was dismissed. .
The question which .it is necessary to consider here is: Did the-relation of .employer and employee at all exist between the plaintiff ' and the defendant ? It was sought to-establish this relation .by, the-, - transaction which took place between the plaintiff- and tile alleged ; superintendent, who, it is alleged, gave directions to. the. plaintiff.' with reference to the conduct of the work. It . appears from the-evidence that the plaintiff was in the, employ of Fisher Brothers* and that they .were doing the work, but under what kind-of a con- ¡ tract does not appear. It'is ,sought, however, by -proof,- in -reference;
Upon a consideration of the whole of this evidence, however, it does not by any means establish that this person who had charge of the warehouse in question, and who was evidently managing. the cotton storage business which was carried on by the defendant upon its premises, had anything to do with the management or employment of the. men who were at work painting the building. It appears that Fisher Brothers were the “ bosses ” of the job; that the plaintiff was employed by them, and that the only direction which the alleged superintendent gave in respect to this work was a direction looking to the security of the building during the progress of the work. The plaintiff was not directed as to how he was to do the work except that he should not imperil the building by leaving the windows open, and he was told that he might go in and out of the windows for the purpose of getting upon the scaffold. This by no means constituted such an assumption of control over the servants of Fisher Brothers as would make the defendant responsible even if this alleged superintendent had the authority so to do. In all the directions which he gave he was only taking such precautions as were necessary to protect the property of his prim cipal while this work was being prosecuted. We think the evidence wholly failed to show any assumption or direction of the work Or charge of the work such as would make the plaintiff in any respect the employee of the defendant.
Ueither does the evidence show that the alleged superintendent had any authority whatever to control the work or to give any directions in respect thereto by which he might bind the defendant. All that the evidence tended to show was that he had something to
Upon the whole case, we are' of opinion that the judgment, appealed from'should be affirmed, with costs.
Rumsey, Williams, O’Brien" and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.
■ Judgment affirmed, with costs.