This action for personal injuries received during the course of construction of a building is brought against the general contractor by an employee of the elevator subcontractor. While the plaintiff was in the center of the elevator shaft at about the seventh or eighth floor sitting on some planks laid across the shaft-way, and engaged in untying a chain fall which had been used for hoisting certain machinery through the shaftway, he was struck on the head by a brick and sustained injuries. The testimony is that the shaftway was clear and uncovered from the point of the accident up to about the fifteenth floor, at which latter point there was a covering in the form of a plank across the shaft, and there were-some bricks alongside a hole in the covering. The plaintiff advances
“ It is now well settled that the owner of premises who contracts for the erection of a building thereon owes no duty of active vigilance to protect the employees of one contractor from the negligence of those of another, and that to the employees of the various contractors the only liability on the part of the owner in such case is for some affirmative act of negligence on his part, as by taking some part in the performance of the work other than such general supervision as is necessary to insure its performance in accordance with the contract. (Hawke v. Brown, 28 App. Div. 37; Hexamer v. Webb, 101 N. Y. 377; Engel v. Eureka Club, 137 id. 100; Silver-man v. Binder, 130 App. Div. 581; Burke v. Ireland, 26 id. 487; 166 N. Y. 305; Potter v. Gilbert, 130 App. Div. 632; affd., 196 N. Y. 576.) ” (Joyce v. Convent Ave. Construction Co., 155 App. Div. 586, 589.)
Lotocka v. Elevator Supplies Co. (246 N. Y. 295), urged by the plaintiff as controlling here, is no pattern for the present case. There the deceased stumbled over some rubbish in the dark and fell into an unguarded elevator shaft on which he had performed no work and the door to which had been removed by an employee of a contractor. About two weeks before the accident notice of this unguarded condition had been given to the owner who was engaged in erecting the building, who was in possession and control thereof, and who employed a construction superintendent “ to see that the
The plaintiff has received $3,000 from the brick subcontractor for these same injuries. The testimony concerning the nature, extent and permanency of the injuries, and their effect on his earning capacity, is somewhat indefinite.
As the plaintiff has failed to sustain the burden the law casts upon him, verdict is directed for the defendant.