State of New York MEMORANDUM
Court of Appeals This memorandum is uncorrected and subject to
revision before publication in the New York Reports.
No. 34 SSM 30
Waldemar Biaca-Neto, et al.,
Appellants,
v.
Boston Road II Housing
Development Fund Corporation,
et al.,
Respondents.
Submitted by Lisa M. Comeau, for appellants.
Submitted by Jacqueline Mandell, for respondents.
MEMORANDUM:
The order of the Appellate Division should be modified, without costs, by denying
defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to the Labor Law § 240 (1) cause of action
and loss of consortium cause of action insofar as based upon that section and, as so
modified, affirmed.
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On plaintiff Waldemar Biaca-Neto’s third day at the subject job site, he looked on
as his coworker pulled himself up to a scaffold beam that was approximately seven feet
above the scaffold’s platform, unhooked his safety belt, and entered the building under
construction through a window cut-out. Plaintiff claims that, while attempting to perform
the same maneuver immediately thereafter, he sustained injuries when he slipped and fell
to the scaffold platform. The project’s general contractor, defendant Mountco Construction
and Development Corp., had previously instituted a standing order that workers were not
permitted to enter the building through the window cut-outs. However, no evidence exists
in this record that the general contractor or anyone else, including plaintiff’s employer,
advised plaintiff of the standing order. Instead, the record contains sworn statements from
two of plaintiff’s coworkers that they used the scaffolding “to go into the building . . .
through openings for windows at the different floor levels.”
A defendant has no liability under Labor Law § 240 (1) when plaintiffs: (1) “had
adequate safety devices available,” (2) “knew both that” the safety devices “were available
and that [they were] expected to use them,” (3) “chose for no good reason not to do so,”
and (4) would not have been injured had they “not made that choice” (Cahill v Triborough
Bridge & Tunnel Auth., 4 NY3d 35, 40 [2004]). Here, a triable issue of fact exists as to
whether plaintiff knew he was expected to use the safety devices provided to him, despite
the apparent accepted practice of entering the building through the window cut-outs from
the scaffolding. Indeed, as the Appellate Division dissent concluded, the Appellate
Division majority (and the dissent here) “ignore[] the evidence in the record that workers
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on this job site used the scaffold to go through window cut-outs to enter the interior of the
building and that the scaffold was clearly inadequate for that purpose” (176 AD3d 1, 10
[1st Dept 2019] [Moulton, J., dissenting in part]).1
Given defendants’ purported acquiescence to this alleged practice, the general
contractor’s standing order directing workers not to enter the building through the cut-outs
is insufficient to entitle defendants to summary judgment (see Gallagher v New York Post,
14 NY3d 83, 88 [2010]). Further, the accepted practice could have negated the normal and
logical inclination to use the scaffold, stairs, or hoist instead of the cut-outs (see
Montgomery v Federal Express Corp., 4 NY3d 805, 806 [2005]). Finally, in context and
given the other conflicting evidence in the record, a factfinder should determine whether
plaintiff’s statement that he “wasn’t supposed to pass through there” unambiguously
establishes that he knew he was expected to use the safety devices.
Accordingly, the Labor Law § 240 (1) cause of action was improperly dismissed
because a triable issue of fact exists as to whether plaintiff’s conduct was the sole proximate
cause of his injuries. So much of the related derivative loss of consortium cause of action
also was erroneously dismissed. No basis exists to reinstate the causes of action sounding
in common-law negligence and Labor Law §§ 200 and 241 (6).
1
The dissent at this Court omits from its factual recitation that plaintiff allegedly followed
his coworker’s lead in attempting to enter the building through the window cut-out. The
dissent also omits any reference to the sworn statements of plaintiff’s coworkers described
above.
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Biaca-Neto, et al. v Boston Road II Housing Development Fund Corporation, et al.
SSM No. 30
GARCIA, J. (dissenting):
Plaintiff was working on scaffolding near the seventh floor of a 12-story building.
It is undisputed that at least two fully functional devices – a scaffold staircase and a hoist
– were available to enable plaintiff to safely descend from the scaffolding platform. It is
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similarly undisputed that plaintiff was aware of those safety devices; he himself had built
the scaffold staircase, and he had used the staircase to climb the scaffolding the morning
of his accident. Yet plaintiff, an experienced and OSHA-certified worker, decided to take
a shorter route. After unhooking his safety harness, plaintiff tried to climb the scaffold
railing and hoist himself onto a cross-beam in order to enter the building through an
unfinished window nine to ten feet above the platform. He was injured in the process.
Plaintiff chose convenience over safety, and he alone is responsible for the resulting
injuries.
Liability under Labor Law § 240 (1) “does not attach” where adequate safety
devices are available and the plaintiff “knew he was expected to use them but for no good
reason chose not to do so, causing an accident” (Gallagher v New York Post, 14 NY3d 83,
88 [2010]). Where a worker declines to use an available safety device, the worker’s “own
negligence is the sole proximate cause of his injury,” precluding him from recovering (id.,
citing Cahill v Triborough Bridge & Tunnel Auth., 4 NY3d 35, 39-40 [2004]). Put
differently, “an owner who has provided safety devices is not liable for failing to insist that
a recalcitrant worker use the devices” (Cahill, 4 NY3d at 39 [internal quotation marks and
citation omitted]). The owner’s obligation is to provide appropriate safety devices – not to
protect employees who ignore them.
We have consistently rejected attempts to impose liability on owners and contractors
for injuries caused solely by an employee’s reckless behavior. In Cahill v Triborough
Bridge & Tunnel Auth., for instance, we held that “summary judgment should not have
been granted in [the] plaintiff’s favor” where he “chose not to use” an available safety
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device (4 NY3d at 38, 40). Similarly, in Montgomery v Federal Express Corp., we held
that the plaintiff was “not entitled to recover under Labor Law § 240 (1)” where, “[r]ather
than go and get a ladder,” he chose to stand on an inverted bucket, and then jump down (4
NY3d 805, 806 [2005]). And in Robinson v East Med. Ctr., LP, we held that the plaintiff’s
“own negligent actions” – namely, “choosing to use a six-foot ladder that he knew was too
short for the work to be accomplished” – were, “as a matter of law, the sole proximate
cause of his injuries” since “there was adequate safety devices – eight-foot ladders –
available for [the] plaintiff’s use at the job site” (6 NY3d 550, 555 [2006]). By contrast,
in Gallagher v New York Post, the plaintiff was permitted to recover because there was
“no evidence in the record” that he knew “where to find the safety devices” or “that he was
expected to use them” (14 NY3d at 88).
The record here is clear: plaintiff’s own negligence was the sole proximate cause of
his injuries. At the time of the accident, plaintiff had been employed by the same
construction company for five or six months. The company “ma[d]e buildings and
apartments” and, according to plaintiff, “[t]hey do almost everything.” Plaintiff had
previously worked for at least two other construction companies. As part of his current
job, plaintiff was often responsible for erecting and dismantling scaffolding on worksites.
He had a bachelor’s degree from a four-year university, and became OSHA certified after
completing a ten-hour course.
Just prior to the accident, plaintiff was standing on the building’s exterior
scaffolding when he was asked to work on the other side of the building. At least two
functional safety devices were available to allow plaintiff to descend from the scaffolding
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platform: a scaffold staircase and a hoist. Plaintiff was well aware of those safety devices.
During his deposition, plaintiff confirmed that he himself had built the scaffolding,
including its built-in staircase. He also admitted that he had climbed the scaffold staircase
earlier that day in order to reach the scaffolding platform where he was working.
Rather than descending by way of the hoist, or the scaffold staircase that he had
built and used, plaintiff chose to scale the lateral beams of the scaffolding in order to enter
the building’s interior through a window cutout. In order to reach the cutout, which was
nine to ten feet above the scaffolding platform, plaintiff – who was five feet, eight inches
tall – was required to disconnect his safety harness, climb up the scaffolding frame, and
hoist himself onto a steel cross-beam connecting the scaffolding to the building. In the
process, plaintiff – perhaps unsurprisingly – injured his shoulder.
As adequate safety devices were readily available, plaintiff’s “normal and logical
response” should have been to use them – not to take an objectively unsafe shortcut
(Montgomery, 4 NY3d at 806). Plaintiff does not allege that anyone directed him to enter
the building in such an ill-advised and unpredictable manner, and Labor Law § 240 (1)
contains no requirement that owners and contractors expressly “advise[]” workers that
reckless behavior is prohibited (majority op at 2). In Montgomery, for example, there was
no indication that the plaintiff was instructed not to climb on an inverted bucket (4 NY3d
at 806). And in Robinson, there was no record evidence that the plaintiff was advised not
to use a ladder that was plainly “too short for the work to be accomplished” (6 NY3d at
555). Yet those defendants were entitled to summary judgment because, in each case, the
plaintiff’s careless actions were the sole proximate cause of his injuries (see Robinson, 6
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NY3d at 555; Montgomery, 4 NY3d at 806). Of course, owners and contractors could
never anticipate the infinite ways in which a worker might recklessly evade safety
protocols. The majority’s contrary suggestion – that owners and contractors must expressly
prohibit all conceivable forms of mischief – erects a new and impossible barrier that finds
no support in our case law.
It is equally irrelevant that plaintiff was attempting the same unsafe “maneuver” as
his coworker (majority op at 2). Reckless maneuvers are still reckless no matter how many
times they are performed. Plaintiff cannot defeat summary judgment by simply pointing
to a coworker who made the same misguided decision to disregard the various safety
devices that defendants had provided.1
In any event, we can be assured that “plaintiff knew he was expected to use the
safety devices provided to him” (majority op at 2) because plaintiff himself said so. During
his deposition, plaintiff unambiguously admitted that he knew he “wasn’t supposed to pass
through” the window cutout. And candidly, plaintiff conceded that “it would have been
much safer to just descend the stairs and go back the way [he] came.” The result in this
case should be straightforward: A plaintiff is not entitled to recover under Labor Law
1
Even if widespread recklessness could justify plaintiff’s conduct, there is no evidence that
defendants “acquiesce[d]” to plaintiff’s behavior such that it constituted an “accepted
practice” (majority op at 3). To the contrary, the Assistant Superintendent at the worksite
testified that, “[f]or safety reasons,” workers were not permitted to use window cutouts to
access the building. Had he seen workers “go through windows into the building from the
scaffolding,” the Assistant Superintendent would have “remove[d] them” from the
worksite “right away” because they were “not permitted to do so.” There was no evidence
that a single worker ever passed through a window cutout in the presence of a manager, or
that anyone ever reported that workers were using cutouts to access the building from the
scaffolding.
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§ 240 (1) “if adequate safety devices are available at the job site, but the worker either does
not use them or misuses them” (Robinson, 6 NY3d at 554; see also Montgomery, 4 NY3d
at 806).
The majority’s holding boils down to a single proposition: plaintiff might not have
known any better. That suggestion of incompetence is belied by the record, and
dramatically underestimates plaintiff’s capacity to understand basic safety concepts. “The
point of Labor Law § 240 (1) is to compel contractors and owners to comply with the law,
not to penalize them when they have done so” (Blake v Neighborhood Housing Services
of New York City, 1 NY3d 280, 286 [2003]). The undisputed facts in this case lead to only
one conclusion: defendants supplied adequate safety devices, plaintiff knew those devices
were available, and plaintiff made the unwise decision not to use them. Plaintiff’s
negligence was, as a matter of law, the sole proximate cause of his injuries, and
accordingly, defendants are entitled to summary judgment.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
On review of submissions pursuant to section 500.11 of the Rules, order modified, without
costs, by denying defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to the Labor Law § 240
(1) cause of action and loss of consortium cause of action insofar as based upon that section
and, as so modified, affirmed, in a memorandum. Judges Rivera, Fahey, Wilson and
Feinman concur. Judge Garcia dissents in an opinion in which Chief Judge DiFiore and
Judge Stein concur.
Decided February 18, 2020
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