Plaintiff was guiding his automobile truck along City Island road, north, after eight o’clock of an August evening. Defendant was then engaged, under a contract with the city, in repairing the highway, namely, paving the gutter. There were nine piles of granite stones along the side of the road about seventy-five feet apart, but there was a clear space of about twenty-one feet of roadway. The truck was running two or three feet from the line of the piles and was itself about five feet wide, so that there were some thirteen feet of clear space to the chauffeur’s left. Between the eighth and ninth piles the truck struck a round uneven stone five or six inches in diameter, whereupon the chauffeur lost control of the steering gear and ran into the ninth pilé causing damage to the truck for which recovery has been had in this action.
In the first place, it is conceded that there is no evidence that defendant was responsible for the presence of the round stone in the highway, and the statement in the respondent’s brief that this stone ‘ ‘ which had evidently been thrown out with other stones and dirt from the place where the excavation for the gutter had been made ” is purely gratuitous.
On the question whether this round stone was the sole proximate cause of the damage or whether the pile of granite blocks was not an equally efficient concurrent cause, I think that the case of Sweet v. Perkins, 196 N. Y. 482, must be regarded as decisive that both were efficient causes. See also Ring v. City of Cohoes, 77 N. Y. 83.
The present case, however, differs from the Sweet case in that in the latter, a pile of manure deposited in the highway by the defendant was a nuisance. In the present case the deposit of the granite blocks upon *47the highway was expressly authorized by the city and thus ceased to be a nuisance. As the stone was placed in the highway for a legitimate public purpose, the city had the right to authorize its temporary presence under adequate precautions. Cohen v. Mayor, 113 N. Y. 532. Consequently, it being clear that the piles of stone were placed in the highway “ with the consent of the proper municipal officers, the rule of liability relaxes its severity and rests upon the ordinary principles governing actions of negligence. The person receiving the license is held to impliedly agree to perform the act permitted with due care for the safety of the public, and is made liable for any violation of duty in this regard. * * * "When conditions, whether express or implied, are annexed to the license, substantial compliance therewith is essential to the protection of the licensee, but consent and compliance relieve the owner from the imputation of trespassing in doing the act consented to, and place him in the position of one liable for negligence only.” Babbage v. Powers, 130 N. Y. 281, 286, 287 ; Clifford v. Dam, 81 id. 52, 56 ; Wolf v. Kilpatrick, 101 id. 146 ; Village, of Port Jervis v. First Nat. Bank, 96 id. 550, 556. See, also, Village of Seneca Falls v. Zalinski, 8 Hun, 571.
The contract between the city and defendant contained the following requirements: ‘ During the performance of the work proper guards shall be placed upon and around the same for the prevention of accidents, and at night suitable and sufficient lights shall be put up and kept lighted from sunset to sunrise, by the contractor. * * * The contractor shall place proper guards for the prevention of accident, and shall put up and keep at night suitable and sufficient lights where necessary, during the delivery of mate*48rials and supplies, to prevent accident or injuries to the person or property of another. ’ ’
There is a conflict in the testimony as to whether there was a lighted red lantern on the last pile. There is no doubt that there was a lighted white lantern on the second pile. The road is illuminated by electric arc lights, one of which was only thirty yards distant from this ninth pile. Plaintiff testified that he could see the road ahead of him for fifty or sixty feet.
It seems plain to me, therefore, that the appellant had ample-authority from the city to deposit the stone on the highway for a legitimate public purpose and that he had at least substantially complied with the terms of the permission by having the same suitably lighted. The action was, therefore, properly tried— as it seems to have been — as one based upon the alleged negligence of the appellant. The negligence claimed by the plaintiff is failure to suitably light the obstruction. Assuming that this reasonable precaution was not conclusively shown to have been taken by defendant, nevertheless the failure was not the cause of the accident.
• Plaintiff testified that he had passed along this road during the afternoon and was aware of the presence of these piles of stone, and was, as he says, at the time of the accident ‘ ‘ using extra precaution. ’ ’ He could see the stones on the roadway fifty or sixty feet ahead of him. Moreover, he says: “We struck a small stone on the edge of the road five or six inches in diameter, which took the starting bar out of my hands and put me into a bank of dirt which was thrown up from an excavation, and before I could control it or get it out, it crashed into a big pile of paving stones.” It is evident, therefore, that the accident occurred not through plaintiff’s running into a pile of *49paving stones which he could not see because of the absence of suitable or sufficient lights where necessary, but because he struck a-stone for the presence of which defendant was not responsible, and thus lost control of his truck which then struck the pile of stones.
Therefore, although, under the circumstances disclosed in this case, there seems to have been no negligence on the part of the defendant, still, assuming that there had been, that negligence manifestly had nothing to do with the accident.
The judgment must, therefore, be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Seabury, J., concurs.