Tom, J.P., and Andrias, J.,
dissent in a memorandum by Tom, J.R, as follows: The majority awards summary judgment to plaintiff by employing the conclusory reasoning that because the accident involved the use of a safety device enumerated under Labor Law § 240 (1), and the worker was injured while operating the device, the worker is entitled to recover for his injuries. In this case, no defect in the machine he used to lift a pallet of bricks onto a scaffold is identified. Nor was the platform of the machine from which the worker fell a type of elevation risk requiring protection against the hazard represented by the force of gravity. More significantly, the evidence raises a factual issue as to whether plaintiff’s injuries were caused solely by his own negligent operation of the machine. Finally, plaintiff could not give an explanation as to how the incident occurred and there are at least two identified witnesses to the occurrence who were subpoenaed but have not yet been deposed and are in a position to shed light on how it occurred. Thus, summary judgment was prematurely awarded.
According to plaintiff Michael Somereve, Louis Caratini, a laborer working on the fourth floor at a school construction project was at the controls of a prime mover loaded with about 1,500 pounds of bricks. After plaintiff observed that Caratini appeared to be highly anxious, plaintiff took over the operation of the machine. The prime mover was a piece of equipment owned by plaintiff’s employer. After lowering the load to the floor, he first backed out the fork from the pallet on which the bricks, wrapped in plastic sheeting and further secured by plastic bands, had been previously deposited. He reinserted the tines to make sure they protruded through the pallet to the maximum extent and verified that the load was properly balanced. He then raised the load a few inches off the floor and approached a scaffold that was six feet in height. The next step would be to raise the pallet of bricks and place them on top of the scaffold. As plaintiff relates, he had to be some four to six inches away from the edge or front of the scaffold before lifting the bricks to the top of the scaffold. If he was too close to the scaffold, “[t]he forks would hit the scaffold.” After the skid of bricks was raised past the height of the scaffold he would drive forward and rest the pallet on the scaffold where the bricks could be unwrapped and manually transferred by laborers to where masons would use them to face the exterior cinder block wall.
When one of two persons on the scaffold told him that he could begin to raise the fork, plaintiff began to raise the pallet of bricks. As it reached a height of about five feet, for reasons plaintiff alleged to be unable to explain, the load “flipped forward and [plaintiff! was ejected off the back of the machine.” Plaintiff stated that Caratini witnessed the accident, but he did not know if the two laborers on the scaffold, one named Mike, saw what happened.
The majority opines that because the force of gravity operated on either the prime mover or the scaffold and plaintiff sustained injury, he is entitled to recover under Labor Law § 240 (1). However, the Court of Appeals has made clear that injury from a fall at a construction site does not automatically bring a worker within the ambit of the protection afforded by the statute. “Among other prerequisites, a worker must demonstrate the existence of an elevation-related hazard contemplated by the statute and a failure to provide the worker with an adequate safety device” (Berg v Albany Ladder Co., Inc., 10 NY3d 902, 904 [2008]), as well as a nexus between the violation and the resulting injury (Blake v Neighborhood Hous. Servs. of N.Y. City, 1 NY3d 280, 289 [2003]). Here, plaintiffs mere statement that the mover “flipped forward,” without more, is insufficient for the majority to grant summary judgment in light of evidence showing his injuries were proximately caused by his own negligent operation of the machine.
In contrast with the majority’s conclusion that the prime mover simply “pitched forward” when plaintiff raised the fork, the evidence, ignored by the majority, supports finding that the prime mover was caused to come into contact with the scaffold by plaintiff while he was raising the pallet of bricks or while he was negligently lowering the pallet onto the scaffold when the fork of the mover had not yet cleared the top of the scaffold. Hence, the evidence raises a factual issue as to whether this incident was caused solely by plaintiff’s negligent operation of the mover, thus precluding the grant of summary judgment to plaintiff on the Labor Law § 240 (1) claim. Supreme Court thus erred when it granted plaintiff partial summary judgment on his Labor Law § 240 (1) claim since a “reasonable jury could have concluded that plaintiff’s actions were the sole proximate cause of his injuries, and consequently that liability under [section] 240 (1) did not attach” (Weininger v Hagedorn & Co., 91 NY2d 958, 960 [1998]).
First, there is no proof offered by plaintiff that the device, the prime mover, provided was defective or that it proximately caused plaintiff’s injuries. Rather, the evidence suggests that plaintiff’s injuries were caused solely by his negligent operation of the prime mover. The incident caused extensive damage to the scaffold, but the prime mover was found not to be defective nor did it malfunction. In fact, the mover continued to be used after the accident without any operational problems or repairs whatsoever. Charles J. Krammer, the project superintendent for Plaza Construction Corp., the general contractor, who was at the site shortly after the accident, stated that the prime mover had no apparent physical damage and was immediately put back into service “because the equipment looked fine and he claimed to have fallen off of it.” Michael Catalano, supervisor for Town Masonry, plaintiff’s employer, also avers in his affidavit that he observed no damage to the prime mover after the incident and confirmed that it was placed back into operation without any problems.
Nor has the scaffold been shown to have been inadequate to afford the requisite statutory protection. It prevented two workers (who, Krammer testified, were supposed to be present on the scaffold just in case an incident such as this occurred) from falling, and it prevented the bricks dropped onto it from causing injury to workers below. Thus, “there is no evidence that the scaffolding was defective or otherwise failed to perform its function of elevating the workers and their material,” and plaintiff is not entitled to summary judgment on the issue of liability (Beesimer v Albany Ave./Rte. 9 Realty, 216 AD2d 853, 855 [3d Dept 1995]).
Krammer examined the site and observed that the pallet had been dropped onto the scaffold flooring, a platform made up of five 2 by 10 or 2 by 12 planks, with such force so as to dislodge the two planks closest to the outer wall of the scaffold, causing the front edge of the pallet to penetrate the platform and protrude a couple of feet beneath the planking. The support and cross-brace bars of the scaffold were bent from the impact. The fact that the front cross-brace bar of the scaffold was bent indicates something heavy (the prime mover) striking it directly with force. Based on plaintiff’s testimony, the accident occurred when he raised the skid of bricks about five feet, from which it can be reasonably inferred that at the time of the impact the pallet of bricks had not cleared the top of the scaffold which was six feet in height and the pallet of bricks were dropped onto the scaffold flooring. Indeed, shortly after the incident, plaintiff informed Krammer that he believed that “the forks caught and it threw him.” Krammer testified that from the damages he observed, “It looked like he was backing out, the forks caught and the load shifted and ejected him off the machine.”
The majority suggests that the accident occurred, because “either the prime mover or scaffold could not support the weight of the brick load.” There is no evidence presented to support this contention. Catalano testified, and it was undisputed, that the prime mover was well suited to lifting a 1,500-pound pallet of bricks and had been routinely lifting and placing this capacity of bricks on the scaffold for weeks before the incident and continued to do so after the incident without any problems (cf. Penaranda v 4933 Realty, LLC, 118 AD3d 596 [1st Dept 2014] [Bobcat overloaded with plywood requiring injured employee to ride on the back to act as a counterweight]; Potter v Jay E. Potter Lbr. Co., Inc., 71 AD3d 1565 [4th Dept 2010] [forklift with operating capacity of 1,500 pounds insufficient to hoist 2,780-pound load]; Bilderback v Agway Petroleum Corp., 185 AD2d 372, 373 [3d Dept 1992], lv dismissed 80 NY2d 971 [1992] [the plaintiff injured while riding forklift to provide counterweight because it “appeared wobbly and unstable”]). Further, plaintiff personally ascertained that the load was properly positioned and secured before proceeding to the scaffold. The fact that the prime mover was equipped to handle a 1,500 pound pallet of bricks has been conceded by plaintiff.
In Runner v New York Stock Exch., Inc. (13 NY3d 599, 602-603 [2009]), on which the majority purports to rely, liability was predicated on the failure to supply a pulley or hoist. The Court of Appeals went on to note: “it is generally agreed that the purpose of the strict liability statute is to protect construction workers not from routine workplace risks, but from the pronounced risks arising from construction work site elevation differentials, and, accordingly, that there will be no liability under the statute unless the injury producing accident is attributable to the latter sort of risk” (citing Rocovich v Consolidated Edison Co., 78 NY2d 509, 514 [1991]).
Plaintiff’s fall from the platform of the prime mover situated eight inches off the floor hardly represents “a risk arising from a physically significant elevation differential” (Runner v New York Stock Exch., Inc., 13 NY3d at 603), let alone one of the “extraordinary elevation risks envisioned by Labor Law § 240 (1)” (Rodriguez v Margaret Tietz Ctr. for Nursing Care, 84 NY2d 841, 843 [1994]). As this Court has recognized, such a fall “did not result from the kind of gravity-related hazard that called for any protective devices of the type listed in Labor Law § 240 (1)” (Bond v York Hunter Constr., 270 AD2d 112, 112 [1st Dept 2000], affd 95 NY2d 883 [2000] [fall while alighting from a tracked vehicle]; Hargobin v K.A.F.C.I. Corp., 282 AD2d 31 [1st Dept 2001] [no protective device required to protect crane operator thrown from seat when boom snapped]).
Further, defendant’s theory that plaintiff caused the accident by negligently raising the prime mover into the scaffolding is supported by the evidence presented, and does not address the issue of comparative negligence, as urged by the majority, but rather raises a question of fact as to whether plaintiff was the sole proximate cause of the accident. Indeed, unlike the cases relied on by the majority (see e.g. Stankey v Tishman Constr. Corp. of N.Y., 131 AD3d 430 [1st Dept 2015]), here plaintiff was provided with all necessary safety devices and the devices were not defective.
While the majority would like to make comparative negligence the issue so as to avoid any consequences from plaintiff’s actions, we are not dealing with comparative fault here. Rather, the evidence raises an issue as to whether plaintiff was the sole proximate cause of the accident which would preclude liability under Labor Law § 240 (1) (see Weininger v Hagedorn & Co., 91 NY2d at 960; Blake v Neighborhood Hous. Servs. of N.Y. City, 1 NY3d at 289-290). This Court has held that “[t]he ‘sole proximate cause’ exception precludes claims under section 240 (1) where the injured party is solely responsible for the accident” (Perrone v Tishman Speyer Props., L.P. 13 AD3d 146, 147 [1st Dept 2004] [citation omitted]). Further, the majority appears to assume a statutory violation simply because plaintiff was injured when he was allegedly “ejected” from the prime mover without considering proximate causation. From that stance, the majority then views any evidence of plaintiff’s negligence as irrevelant and “of no consequence.” However, contrary to the majority’s assumption, there is no evidence of a statutory violation presented in this case. As detailed above, there was no proof that either the prime mover or the scaffolding were defective or inadequate to handle the work at issue. In fact, the evidence presented in this case appears to show that plaintiff’s injuries were caused solely by his own negligence in the operation of the device. Nor does plaintiff argue that a hoisting device should have been provided to him, as the majority suggests. No evidence was offered to show that a hoisting device was even a proper equipment for plaintiff to perform his work at the time of his injuries.
The majority’s reliance on Penaranda v 4933 Realty, LLC (118 AD3d at 596) and Potter v Jay E. Potter Lbr. Co. (71 AD3d at 1565) is inapposite since in those cases the forklift and bobcat provided were improperly overloaded whereas the undisputed evidence here established that the prime mover was capable of lifting the 1,500-pound pallet of bricks, a task for which it was routinely employed.
Moreover, the record reflects that there were witnesses to the accident including Louis Caratini, whom plaintiff specifically testified witnessed the accident, who may supply evidence to establish how the accident occurred, especially when plaintiff supplied no explanation as to how this incident occurred; thus, they should have been examined prior to entertaining and granting the motion (CPLR 3212 [f ). There is nothing in the record to support the majority’s implication that Caratini was not available to testify. Rather, the record establishes that Caratini was subpoenaed for a deposition and the deposition could not proceed because, pursuant to the motion court’s rules, discovery was stayed upon the filing of the summary judgment motion. Further, it is not mere “speculation” to suggest that testimony from an eyewitness could aid in establishing how the accident occurred, especially when plaintiff could not provide an explanation of the occurrence, and where his purported negligence may be the sole proximate cause of the episode.
Finally, in reaching its conclusion that the accident was “gravity-related” and thus summary judgment to plaintiff was warranted, the majority stresses that plaintiff was “ejected” from the prime mover by a “catapult-type effect” and was then “slammed” onto the concrete floor of the site. However, this aspect of the accident is not dispositive and a focus on it evades the more relevant issues concerning whether plaintiff was the sole proximate cause of the accident. Instead, the proper focus should be on the evidence of how the accident occurred, which, at the very least, raises the possibility that plaintiff was ejected from the prime mover solely because he negligently raised the mover’s forks into the scaffold, causing the mover to pitch forward.
A prime mover is similar to a forklift in both design and operation, the difference being that instead of sitting on a seat in the middle of the machine, the operator of the mover is able to stand on a platform at the back of the device or fold np the platform and walk behind it. The platform, which was being used in this instance, is elevated about eight inches above floor level.