Opinion
Index Nos. 514177/2017 12 13 14 15
08-16-2022
Unpublished Opinion
DECISION AND ORDER
Hon. Wayne P. Saitta, Justice.
The following papers numbered on this motion: NYSCEF Doc Numbers
Notice of Motion/Order to Show Cause/ Petition/Cross Motion and Affidavits (Affirmations) Annexed 216-217, 255-258, 2Q1-2Q3, 327, 351-352
Answering Affidavit (Affirmation) 296-297, 299, 355, 277, 304, 309-310, 300-301, 318-310, 353, 356-357. 360-361
Reply Affidavit (Affirmation) 284, 303, 307, 362, 363
Supplemental Affidavit (Affirmation)
Pleadings -Exhibits 218-238, 259-275, 305, 311-317, 204, 320-326, 328-350, 358
Stipulations - Minutes
Filed Papers
This action arises from a construction accident that occurred on July 25, 2014 at 158 Crosby Street, New York, NY 10012 (the Premises).
Defendant MOKLAM ENTERPRISES, INC. (MOKLAM) owned the Premises. Defendant YUCO MANAGEMENT, INC. (YUCO MANAGEMENT) was the property manager for the Premises.
Defendant MOKLAM contracted Defendant/Third-Party Plaintiff YUCO CONSTRUCTION CORP. (YUCO CONSTRUCTION) for masonry work at the Premises. Defendant YUCO CONSTRUCTION in turn contracted Third-Party Defendant/Second Third-Party Plaintiff DAFFODIL GENERAL CONTRACTING, INC. (DAFFODIL) to point and repair the fagade of the Premises.
Defendant DAFFODIL was general contractor for the project at the Premises, and employed Plaintiffs FARHADUR RAHMAN and MOHAMMED BHUIYAN .
DAFFODIL'S contract was subsequently assigned to Defendant/Third-Party Plaintiff YUCO BUILDERS, LLC. (YUCO BUILDERS).
Defendant DAFFODIL retained Defendant NAVICO B&S CONSTRUCTION CORP (NAVICO) to erect a sidewalk shed/bridge for DAFFODIL'S use during the project at the Premises.
At the time of their accident, Plaintiffs were lowering a stone cutting machine from the sidewalk shed to the bed of a truck using a rope tied to the machine. As the Plaintiffs were lowering the machine, they were pulled over the side of the shed and fell onto the truck along with the machine and one of the sidewalk shed's guardrail panels that was detached. The truck was owned by Mohammed K. Alam, the owner of Defendant DAFFODIL and Plaintiffs' supervisor.
Plaintiffs' complaint alleges five causes of action: Labor Law § 240(1), Labor Law § 241(6), Labor Law § 200 and common law negligence, and loss of consortium. Plaintiff BHUIYAN moves for partial summary judgment against Defendants MOKLAM, YUCO BUILDERS, YUCO CONSTRUCTION, YUCO MANAGEMENT, and NAVICO on his claim pursuant to Labor Law § 240(1). Plaintiff RAHMAN has settled out of the case.
Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION and YUCO BUILDERS cross-move to dismiss Plaintiffs' complaint and all third-party claims, counter-claims, and cross-claims as against them.
Defendant NAVICO moves to dismiss Plaintiffs' claims and all cross-claims as against it.
Defendants MOKLAM and YUCO MANAGEMENT cross-move to dismiss Plaintiffs' claims and any and all cross-claims as against them. Defendants MOKLAM and YUCO MANAGEMENT also move for summary judgment against Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION, YUCO BUILDERS, and DAFFODIL for contractual indemnification.
Labor Law § 240(1)Plaintiff BHUIYAN moves for summary judgment against Defendants MOKLAM, YUCO BUILDERS, YUCO CONSTRUCTION, YUCO MANAGEMENT, and NAVICO on his claims pursuant to Labor Law § 240(1) arguing that his accident occurred because the safety device that Defendants had provided, the sidewalk shed panel, collapsed causing Plaintiff to fall.
Defendants oppose and cross-move to dismiss Plaintiff's Labor Law § 240(1) claim as against them, arguing that Plaintiff was the sole proximate cause of the accident and allege that he removed a panel of the sidewalk shed to lower the machine rather than lowering the machine through an opening in the deck of the shed and that he was not wearing his safety harness at the time of the accident.
On the day of the accident, Plaintiff had finished his daily work on the electric scaffold and lowered the scaffold to the sidewalk shed surface. He detached his lifeline, removed his harness, and stepped off the scaffold onto the deck of the sidewalk shed. Plaintiff was awaiting Alam, his supervisor, who had informed him that he would need to help in lowering a stone cutting machine from the sidewalk shed.
The safety device at issue here is the sidewalk shed guard-rail, not the safety harness. Plaintiffs were not required to wear a safety harness when they were on the sidewalk shed. They were required to wear the harness while on the scaffold. Further, Mohan Singh of Defendant NAVICO testified that the plywood panels on the sidewalk shed were guard-rails meant to keep people from falling.
Although Defendants have argued that there is a question of fact as to whether Plaintiffs removed a plywood panel, they have presented no admissible evidence to support that contention. The only evidence offered is a hearsay statement by Singh of NAVCO that he was told by Alam that Plaintiff removed a panel. However, Alam never stated in his deposition (or affidavit) that Plaintiffs removed a panel.
What Alam did testify to was that he did not instruct Plaintiffs to lower the saw over the front edge of the sidewalk shed and that he had expected the Plaintiffs to lower the machine through on opening in the deck of the sidewalk shed. He testified that material, tools and debris were brought up or down using the opening in the deck of the sidewalk shed and that the saw had been brought on top of the sidewalk shed through the opening in the deck.
Here, there are questions of fact as to whether there was an opening in the deck of the sidewalk shed which would have allowed Plaintiffs to lower the machine without putting it over the side of the panel and whether the rope and shed constituted adequate safety devices for lowering the machine.
However, Defendant YUCO MANAGEMENT and Defendant NAVICO correctly argue that they are not proper Defendants to Plaintiffs Labor Law § 240(1) claim as they neither had the authority to supervise or control the work site or Plaintiffs work.
YUCO MANAGEMENT was MOKLAM's managing agent for the building but did not contract for or oversee the pointing and fagade repair. Its role in managing day-to-day building functions was outside the scope of the construction project and therefore it is not a proper Labor Law § 240(1) Defendant.
Defendant NAVICO as a subcontractor of DAFFODIL, who simply erected the sidewalk shed and did not have authority to supervise or control Plaintiffs' work, was not an agent of the owner or general contractor. After supplying and erecting the sidewalk shed, Defendant NAVICO was no longer on the Premises and, pursuant to the contract, Defendant DAFFODIL was required to maintain the sidewalk shed. Defendant NAVICO was not at the Premises on the day of Plaintiffs accident. Therefore, Defendant NAVICO did not control or supervise Plaintiffs work and is not a proper Labor Law § 240(1) Defendant (see Kehoe v Segal, 272 A.D.2d 583 [2d Dept 2000]).
Defendant MOKLAM as owner of the premises is a proper Labor Law § 240(1) Defendant.
"To hold a defendant liable as an agent of the general contractor for violations of Labor Law §§ 240(1) and 241(6), there must be a showing that it had the authority to supervise and control the work (Van Blerkom v. America Painting, LLC, 120 A.D.3d 660, 661 [2d Dept 2014]). '"The determinative factor is whether the party had the right to exercise control over the work, not whether it actually exercised that right'" (id., quoting Bakhtadze v. Riddle, 56 A.D.3d 589, 590 [2d Dept 2008]). "Where the owner or general contractor does in fact delegate the duty to conform to the requirements of the Labor Law to a third-party subcontractor, the subcontractor becomes the statutory agent of the owner or general contractor (Van Blerkom v. America Painting, LLC, 120 A.D.3d at 661-662). "The determinative factor on the issue of control is not whether a subcontractor furnishes equipment but whether he has control of the work being done and the authority to insist that proper safety practices be followed" (Lopes v. Interstate Concrete, 293 A.D.2d 579, 580 [2d Dept 2002], quoting Everitt v. Nozkowski, 285 A.D.2d 442, 443-444])
Based on the foregoing, Plaintiffs motion for summary judgment as to Labor Law § 240(1) must be denied; Defendants' motions to dismiss the Labor Law § 240(1) claim must be denied except that Defendant YUCO MANAGEMENT and DEFENDANT NAVICO are entitled to have the Labor Law § 240(1) claim dismissed as against them only.
Labor Law § 241(6)Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION and YUCO BUILDERS, Defendants MOKLAM and YUCO MANAGEMENT, and Defendant NAVICO cross-move to dismiss Plaintiff's claim pursuant to Labor Law § 241(6) claim. Plaintiff does not oppose.
Labor Law § 200 and Common Law Negligence
Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION and YUCO BUILDERS cross-move to dismiss Plaintiff's claim pursuant to Labor Law § 200 and common law negligence.
Defendant NAVICO cross-moves to dismiss Plaintiff's claim pursuant to Labor Law § 200 and common law negligence.
Defendants MOKLAM and YUCO MANAGEMENT cross-move to dismiss Plaintiffs claim pursuant to Labor Law § 200 and common law negligence.
"Section 200 of the Labor Law is a codification of the common-law duty of a landowner to provide workers with a reasonably safe place to work" (Zukowski v. Powell Cove Estates Home Owners Association, 187 A.D.3d 1099,1101 [2d Dept 2020], quoting Lombardi v. Stout, 80 N.Y.2d 290, 294 [1992]). Unlike sections 240(1) and 241(6), section 200 does not impose vicarious liability on owners and owner's agents.
Labor Law § 200 cases fall into two categories: (1) those where workers are injured as a result of dangerous or defective premises conditions at a worksite, and (2) those involving the manner in which the work is performed.
Where the manner of work is at issue, "no liability will attach to the owner solely because it may have had notice of the allegedly unsafe manner in which work was performed" (Dennis v. City of New York, 304 A.D.2d 611, 612 [2d Dept 2003].) Rather, when a claim is made due to alleged defects or dangers in the methods or materials of the work, it must be shown that the party to be charged has the authority to supervise or control the performance of the work. (Zukowski v. Powell Cove Estates Home Owners Association, 187 A.D.3d 1099 [2d Dept 2020]; Rizzuto v. LA. Wenger Contr. Co., 91 N.Y.2d 343 [1998]).
Plaintiff's accident arose not from a dangerous condition at the premises or on the sidewalk shed but by the means and methods employed. Plaintiff does not demonstrate that any of the moving Defendants controlled or supervised Plaintiffs work. Plaintiff's own testimony is that all instructions and directions came from Alam of DAFFODIL.
As the moving Defendants did not control or supervise Plaintiffs work, they cannot be held liable either under Labor Law § 200 or a claim of negligence and their cross-motions to dismiss Plaintiffs claim pursuant to Labor Law § 200 and common law negligence must be granted.
Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION and YUCO BUILDERS claims for Indemnification
Contractual indemnification against Defendant DAFFODIL
Defendant DAFFODIL does not oppose this portion of Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION and YUCO BUILDERS motion because Defendant DAFFODIL'S carrier has already accepted the tender demands and agreed to indemnify YUCO CONSTRUCTION, YUCO BUILDERS, MOKLAM and YUCO MANAGEMENT pursuant to its contractual indemnification obligations. Therefore, Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION and YUCO BUILDERS cross-motion for contractual indemnification against Defendant DAFFODIL is GRANTED only to the extent that any award exceeds DAFFODIL'S policy limits.
Common law indemnification against Defendant NAVICO
Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION and YUCO BUILDERS move for summary judgment on their claim for common law indemnification against Defendant NAVICO. Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION and YUCO BUILDERS motion must be denied because, as discussed above, NAVICO was not negligent as it did not control or supervise Plaintiffs work.
Defendants MOKLAM and YUCO MANAGEMENT'S claims for Indemnification
Contractual Indemnification against Defendants YUCO BUILDERS and YUCO CONSTRUCTION
Defendants MOKLAM and YUCO MANAGEMENT'S cross-motion as to contractual indemnification against Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION and YUCO BUILDERS must be denied as they did not append the contract between MOKLAM and YUCO CONSTRUCTION or the subsequent assignment of that contract from YUCO CONSTRUCTION to YUCO BUILDERS. Contractual Indemnification against Defendant DAFFODIL Defendants MOKLAM and YUCO MANAGEMENT'S cross-motion as to contractual indemnification against Defendant DAFFODIL must be denied as they never plead a claim for contractual indemnification against DAFFODIL. In any event, Defendant DAFFODIL'S carrier has already accepted the tender demands and agreed to indemnify them up to DAFFODIL'S policy limits.
Motions to Dismiss Cross-Claims for Common Law Indemnification
As discussed above, Defendants MOKLAM, YUCO MANAGEMENT, YUCO CONSTRUCTION, YUCO BUILDERS and NAVICO did not supervise or control Plaintiffs and thus were not negligent. Therefore, the cross claims against these Defendants for common law indemnification and contribution must be dismissed.
WHEREFORE, it is ORDERED that Plaintiffs motion for summary judgment as to Labor Law § 240(1) is DENIED; and it is further
ORDERED that Defendants MOKLAM and YUCO MANAGEMENT'S cross-motion to dismiss Plaintiffs Labor Law § 240(1) claim as against them is DENIED as to Defendant MOKLAM and GRANTED as to Defendant YUCO MANAGMENT; and it is further
ORDERED that Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION and YUCO BUILDERS cross-motion to dismiss Plaintiffs Labor Law § 240(1) claim as against them is DENIED; and it is further
ORDERED that Defendant NAVICO's cross-motion to dismiss Plaintiffs Labor Law §240(1) claim as against it is GRANTED; and it is further
ORDERED that that Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION and YUCO BUILDERS cross-motion to dismiss Plaintiffs Labor Law § 241(6) claim as against them is GRANTED; and it is further
ORDERED that Defendant NAVICO's cross-motion to dismiss Plaintiffs Labor Law §241(6) claim as against it is GRANTED; and it is further
ORDERED that Defendants MOKLAM and YUCO MANAGEMENT'S cross-motion to dismiss Plaintiffs Labor Law § 241(6) claim as against them is GRANTED; and it is further
ORDERED that that Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION and YUCO BUILDERS cross-motion to dismiss Plaintiffs Labor Law § 200 and common law negligence claim as against them is GRANTED; and it is further
ORDERED that that Defendant NAVICO's cross-motion to dismiss Plaintiffs Labor Law § 200 and common law negligence claim as against it is GRANTED; and it is further
ORDERED that Defendants MOKLAM and YUCO MANAGEMENT'S cross-motion to dismiss Plaintiffs Labor Law § 200 and common law negligence claim as against them is GRANTED; and it is further
ORDERED that Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION and YUCO BUILDERS cross-motion for contractual indemnification against Defendant DAFFODIL is GRANTED only to the extent that any award exceeds DAFFODIL'S policy limits; and it is further
ORDERED that Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION and YUCO BUILDERS cross-motion for common law indemnification against Defendant NAVICO is DENIED; and it is further
ORDERED that Defendants MOKLAM and YUCO MANAGEMENT'S cross-motion for contractual indemnification against Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION and YUCO BUILDERS is DENIED; and it is further
ORDERED that Defendants MOKLAM and YUCO MANAGEMENT'S cross-motion for contractual indemnification against Defendant DAFFODIL is DENIED; and it is further
ORDERED that Defendants MOKLAM's and YUCO MANAGEMENT'S cross-motion to dismiss the cross-claims for common law indemnification and contribution against them is GRANTED; and it is further
ORDERED that Defendants YUCO CONSTRUCTION'S and YUCO BUILDER'S cross-motion to dismiss the cross-claims for common law indemnification and contribution against them is GRANTED; and it is further
ORDERED that Defendant NAVICO's cross-motion to dismiss the cross claims for common law indemnification and contribution against them is GRANTED.
This constitutes the decision and order of the Court.