Opinion
January 20, 1998
Appeal from the Supreme Court, Putnam County (Hickman, J.).
Ordered that the order is reversed insofar as appealed from, on the law, with one bill of costs payable by the plaintiff, the motions are granted, and the complaint and the third-party complaint are dismissed.
The plaintiff was a laborer employed by the third-party defendant to work on the home of the defendants third-party plaintiffs, John and Holly Frengs. The plaintiff's job required him to make several trips to the basement of that home, which had a low ceiling from which hung a cast-iron pipe. The plaintiff admitted that the basement was illuminated by at least two light bulbs, as well as by a certain amount of daylight. During his third day on the job, the plaintiff struck his head on the protruding pipe, and sued the homeowners for his resulting head and neck injuries, alleging that they had been negligent in failing to warn him of the dangerous condition posed by the existence of the pipe.
On these facts, summary judgment should have been granted to the defendants and the third-party defendant. There is no duty to warn against a condition that the plaintiff had seen before, was in plain view, and could easily have been observed by the plaintiff through the reasonable use of his senses ( see, e.g., Moran v. County of Dutchess, 237 A.D.2d 266; Perez v. New York City Indus. Dev. Agency, 223 A.D.2d 628; Zaffiris v. O'Loughlin, 184 A.D.2d 696).
Rosenblatt, J.P., O'Brien, Thompson, Friedmann and Goldstein, JJ., concur.