| Kopsachilis v 130 E. 18 Owners Corp. |
| 2007 NY Slip Op 06809 [43 AD3d 744] |
| September 20, 2007 |
| Appellate Division, First Department |
| Christine Kopsachilis, Respondent, v 130 East 18 OwnersCorp. et al., Appellants. |
—[*1] Segal & Lax, New York (Patrick Daniel Gatti of counsel), for respondent.
Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Emily Jane Goodman, J.), entered May 30, 2006,which, inter alia, denied defendants' motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint,affirmed, without costs.
Plaintiff allegedly sustained injuries when she attempted to descend a darkened interiorstaircase in defendants' building during a blackout. In view of triable issues as to whetherdefendants took appropriate measures to maintain the building's emergency stairwell lighting,summary judgment was properly denied (see Goldstein v Consolidated Edison Co. ofN.Y., 115 AD2d 34, 40 [1986], lv denied 68 NY2d 604 [1986]). Contrary todefendant owner's argument its obligation to light the staircase at issue is not governed byMultiple Dwelling Law § 37 (2), but by Multiple Dwelling Law § 37 (3), whichdoes not relieve an owner of responsibility for lights extinguished without its knowledge orconsent, but rather commands categorically that every light in a windowless fire-stair "shall bekept burning continuously."
We have reviewed defendants' remaining arguments and find them unavailing.Concur—Tom, J.P., Williams and Gonzalez, JJ.
Marlow and Catterson, JJ., dissent in a memorandum by Catterson, J., as follows: Because Ibelieve that well-settled law requires an unexcused violation of the statute at issue for afinding of negligence per se, I must respectfully dissent. In my opinion, the defendants in thiscase took all reasonable care in their efforts to comply with the statute under particularly harshcircumstances.
This negligence per se claim alleging the defendants' violation of Multiple Dwelling Law§ 37 requiring "continuous" lighting in interior stairwells arose out of the plaintiff's tripand fall during the blackout of the East Coast on August 14 and 15, 2003. Because of theblackout, the plaintiff, Christine Kopsachilis, could not return home. She spent the night at acolleague's apartment on the fourth floor of a building at 130 East 18th Street, owned by 130 East18 Owners Corp. and managed by Century Operating Corp. (hereinafter referred to as thedefendants). [*2]When the plaintiff arrived at the apartmentbuilding on the night of August 14, a building employee, carrying a light to illuminate thestairway, accompanied her up the stairs. On the morning of August 15, 2003, the electricity stillhad not been restored to the building. The plaintiff and her colleague set out to descend the stairswithout a flashlight.
According to the plaintiff, the hallway was dim, and when she opened the door to thestairwell, she saw that it was "pitch black." The plaintiff testified that immediately upon openingthe door, she tapped her left foot beyond the door to see whether there was a landing. As she didso, her foot went "forward and down," and she fell down the stairs. The plaintiff broke her handand wrist in the fall, and eventually underwent surgery. She testified that she was not aware ofany water or debris on the stairs when she fell.
The plaintiff filed a summons and complaint against the defendants, asserting a cause ofaction for negligence. In a supplemental bill of particulars, the plaintiff alleged that thedefendants had violated Multiple Dwelling Law § 37.
After discovery, the defendants moved for summary judgment dismissing the complaint. Thedefendants argued that they had taken steps to provide emergency lighting even though thebuilding's classification did not require them to do so under the New York City AdministrativeCode. Furthermore, the defendants asserted that they had not created the East Coast blackout;therefore, they argued, they were not liable, especially where they had undertaken to escortbuilding residents and their guests down the stairs with lighting. As a result, the defendantsasserted, the plaintiff alone proximately caused her accident by stepping into an unlit stairway.The plaintiff cross-moved for summary judgment, arguing that under Multiple Dwelling Law§ 37, the defendants were negligent per se. The plaintiff also submitted an expert affidavitfrom one Stanley Fein, who opined that the defendants had been negligent in failing to keepbackup batteries on the premises. The motion court denied both the motion and the cross motionfor summary judgment.
In my view, the motion court should have granted the defendants' motion for summaryjudgment and dismissed the complaint.
Multiple Dwelling Law § 37 states in pertinent part:
"1. In every multiple dwelling the owner shall provide a light or lights, each of at least sixtywatts incandescent . . . for every vestibule and entrance hall in every public hall,stair, fire-stair . . . on every floor. Said light or lights shall be located as prescribedby the department, but, in every stair, fire-stair or fire-tower, shall be so located that every partthereof shall be lighted.
"2. Except as provided in subdivision three, every such light shall be turned on by the ownerat sunset every day and shall not be turned off by the owner until the following sunrise. Everysuch light shall be kept burning daily from sunset until sunrise, but if it becomes extinguishedand remains so without the knowledge or consent of the owner he shall not be liable. . . .
"3. Every light in every fire-stair . . . at every story, and in every stair andpublic hall at every story where there is no window opening to the outer air, shall be kept burningcontinuously . . . ." (Emphasis added.)
On appeal, the defendants argue that the phrase "without the knowledge or consent of [*3]the owner," which appears in subdivision (2) of the statute, alsoapplies to subdivision (3) and therefore they are not liable for the failure to keep the lighting"continuous" in the stairwell where the plaintiff fell. The plaintiff, on the other hand, argues thatthe "without the knowledge or consent" exception to liability does not extend to interiorstairways.
Logic and a plain reading of section 37 in its entirety suggests that the plaintiff's argument isunavailing. Section 37 deals with artificial hall lighting in multiple dwellings. Subdivision (1)dictates the type of lights that must be installed. Subdivision (2) dictates the time period thelights described in subdivision (1) must burn in common areas where some natural light isavailable; subdivision (3) dictates the time period ("continuous") the lights referred to insubdivision (1) must burn in interior areas where there is no natural light. Contrary to theplaintiff's argument, there is no language in subdivision (3) that suggests the "knowledge orconsent" exception is inapplicable to this subdivision.
Indeed, to read it otherwise imposes absolute liability on building owners in subdivision (3),where it is not imposed in subdivision (2). Further, given the facts of the instant case, it imposesabsolute liability of unlimited duration.
Nothing in the language indicates such an intention, nor does the plaintiff advance anyargument that the Legislature intended to differentiate between the subdivisions by imposingabsolute liability on subdivision (3) and not (2). In any event, the plaintiff herself does not imputeabsolute liability to the statute and alleges only negligence per se.
Well-settled law requires us to differentiate between statutes which impose absolute liabilityfor their violation, e.g. statutes designed for the safety of employees (see Van Gaasbeck vWebatuck Cent. School Dist. No. 1, 21 NY2d 239 [1967]) and those where it is theunexcused violation of a statute that constitutes negligence per se. (Gonzalez vMedina, 69 AD2d 14, 17 [1st Dept 1979], citing Martin v Herzog, 228 NY 164,168-170 [1920]; see also Tedla v Ellman, 280 NY 124, 133 [1939] ["The general duty isestablished by the statute, and deviation from it without good cause is a wrong"(emphasis added)].) In the widely-cited Martin case, which involved the absence of lightson a horse-drawn buggy, Judge Cardozo wrote: "the unexcused omission of the statutorysignals . . . is negligence in itself . . . to omit, willfully orheedlessly, the safeguards prescribed by law for the benefit of another . . . isto fall short of the standard of diligence to which those who live in an organized society are undera duty to conform" (228 NY at 168; see also Schaeffer v Caldwell, 273 App Div 263[1948]; Petosa v New York, 52 AD2d 919, 921 [1976], citing Miller v Hine, 281AD 387 [1953] [violation of statute is negligence per se "unless . . . justifiablyviolated because of some emergency"]; Arricale v Leo, 295 AD2d 920, 920 [2002],quoting Espinal v Sureau, 262 AD2d 523, 524 [1999] [defendant's "reasonable care in aneffort to comply" with statute excuses violation]).
The plaintiff's contention that the statutory violation here in and of itself establishes thedefendants' negligence fails to address the Martin factors, viz., that the defendants acted"willfully or heedlessly" in violation of the statute. There was nothing wilful about thedefendants' failure to provide continuous lighting and, indeed, they took all reasonable care intheir effort to comply with the statute under particularly harsh circumstances. Uncontrovertedtestimony of the building superintendent established that there were two stairways in thebuilding, both generally lit by artificial illumination, as there was no ambient light. Furthermore,[*4]both stairways were equipped with emergency lighting whichwould operate for approximately 30 to 40 minutes if the electricity failed. The emergencylighting was powered by rechargeable batteries, which were tested once a week. Shortly after theblackout began, the superintendent who had 30 flashlights for every stairway in the building,placed the flashlights in the stairways so that residents could negotiate their way up and down thestairs. He also had the building staff walk people up and down the stairs with flashlights.
The superintendent further testified that by the morning of August 15, the emergency lightswere no longer operating, and he was unable to get replacement batteries because all thesuppliers were closed due to the blackout. As a result, he instructed building staff that they wereto accompany residents up and down the stairs using flashlights. The staff also told the residentsthat if they wanted to go up or down, they should call down or wait for one of the staff.
The plaintiff's assertions that the defendants were negligent because of their failure, inter alia,to stock an adequate supply of backup batteries in order to deal with the emergency in a safe andefficient manner should be rejected. Incredibly, the plaintiff makes this assertion based on theaffidavit of her expert—aptly described by defendants in their brief as the "ubiquitous"Stanley Fein—despite the fact that the motion court characterized Mr. Fein's opinions asnothing more than "conclusory assertions." Indeed, the use of the adjective "conclusory" wasmore polite than the court need have been. In this case, while the blackout may indeed have beenforeseeable (after all, the City did experience a similar, long-lasting blackout almost 30 yearsbefore in 1977) the assertion that the defendants' negligence is established by their failure to keepan adequate supply of backup batteries is simply ludicrous. Generally, such an issue would beone for the trier of fact, and would therefore preclude summary judgment. However, in this case,evidence before the motion court indicated that the defendants' emergency battery-poweredlighting lasted for 45 minutes after the blackout. The plaintiff's trip and fall occurred thefollowing morning about 16 hours after the power outage. Therefore, in the plaintiff's view, anadequate supply of batteries would necessitate stocking/storing more than 20 sets of suchbackup batteries in order to provide lighting in the stairway for the plaintiff's exit. Moreover, if,as it appears to be, the plaintiff's assertion is that the defendants, in order to escape liability, wereobligated to provide continuous lighting, for the entire period of the blackout until 8:00 p.m. thefollowing day, then the defendants would have had to stock more than 30 sets of backupbatteries—for the blackout of August 2003. Since blackouts are of varying durations, anyattempt to quantify the adequacy of backup battery supply and therefore to determine whether thedefendants failed to provide an adequate supply would be necessarily arbitrary and thereforewithout any effect in the law.
Consequently, I believe that Multiple Dwelling Law § 37 is not a statute imposingabsolute liability of unlimited duration on building owners and there exists no triable issue as to[*5]whether the defendants exercised reasonable care in theirefforts to comply with the statute and to provide adequate emergency lighting under thecircumstances.