Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County, entered November 27, 1972, affirmed. Plaintiff-respondent shall recover of appellants one bill of $60 costs and disbursements. Plaintiff-respondent, employee of third-party-defendant-appellant contractor, was injured when he fell from the top - of a freezer availed of as a scaffold during alteration work being done in defendant-appellant’s store. The court gave judgment over, on the third-party claim, of half the jury’s verdict against defendant. The ease was sent to the jury under subdivision 1 of section 240 of the Labor Law, which relates, inter alla, to scaffolding furnished for such work. The ease turned, under the court’s charge, on the twin questions of whether defendant lessee had exercised supervision and direction over the work, and whether the “ scaffolding ” furnished for the work was safe for the purpose. The jury’s verdict implicitly answered both in favor of plaintiff. Plaintiff’s evidence was to the effect that the lessee instructed him to hang a partition above the freezer and to stand on the freezer . to work; that his employer had instructed him to follow defendant lessee’s directions; that the lessee was closely related to the contractor’s president, had theretofore himself been employed by the contractor, and, indeed, had planned the alteration. Against all of this there was the denial by defendant that he had given directions and even that he had been present when the accident took place. The jury’s findings on the evidence were, in effect, that there was “ supervision of the manner and method of the work to be performed.” (Duda v. Bouse Gonstr. Corp., 32 N Y 2d 405, 409.) There can be no quarrel with the jury’s conclusion that the smooth top of a freezer is an unsafe base on which to perform carpentry. And the court was justified in the apparent conclusion that the presence and participation of the contractor’s foreman in plaintiff’s work was sufficient to justify recovery on the claim over. The ease having been made out under the Labor Law, there was no occasion for the requested charge of contributory negligence. (Koenig v. Patrick Gonstr. Corp., 298 N. Y. 313.) As to the existence of intervening cause by plaintiff’s failure to remove articles atop the freezer before working, “ Whether or m-t he [plaintiff] tripped on the debris is unclear from the record” as is stated in the dissent. There was nothing to show that plaintiff’s act of moving these articles for the ostensible purpose of getting them out of the way rendered the freezer any more unsafe as a scaffold, and they were on the freezer when plaintiff was directed so to use it. In any event, though charged to the jury, a finding of existence of intervening cause was not reflected in the verdict. All in all, on the evidence before it, the jury was entitled to find as it did and the verdict should be sustained. Concur — Markewich, J. P., Steuer and Capozzoli, JJ.; Kupferman and Lane, JJ., dissent in the following memorandum by Lane, J. We would reverse. Plaintiff was employed by the third-party defendant, Daca-Brinn, Inc., as a carpenter. He was helping to remodel the Union Square Deli-Store, owned by Nat Davis, the defendant and third-party plaintiff. Plaintiff was directed to complete the trim on top of a freezer, about eight feet above ground level. When plaintiff reached the top of the freezer, he noticed some debris there, consisting of a piece of tile, loose wire and a telephone book. He put these materials to the side of the freezer and began to cut some lumber by bracing it against his body as he was cutting it. He tripped and fell off the freezer hitting his head. Whether or not he tripped on the debris is unclear from the record. The complaint was based on negligence and hinted, but did not clearly state, a theory of violation of section
