
    Benjamin Gottlieb, Respondent, v. City of New York, Defendant, Impleaded with Gustav Grossman and Martin J. Grossman, Appellants.
    First Department,
    November 6, 1914.
    Municipal corporation—negligence—injury to pedestrian by collapse of sidewalk into vault—liability of abutting .owners,
    A pedestrian, injured by the collapse of a sidewalk on a public highway into a vault alleged to have been negligently maintained thereunder by abutting owners, is not entitled to recover against the owners, where he has failed to establish a violation of any municipal ordinance by the defendants, or that they either constructed or adopted, used or maintained the space under the sidewalk.
    Appeal by the defendants, Gustav Grossman and another, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiff and against the appellants, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of New York on the 16th day of February, 1914, upon the verdict of a jury for $1,000, and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the llth day of February, 1914, denying appellants’ motion for a new trial made upon the minutes.
    
      Thornton Earle, for the appellants.
    
      Herman Gottlieb, for the respondent.
   Dowling, J.:

The plaintiff on October 21, 1912, was walking upon the sidewalk in front of No. 191 Canal street in the city of New York, when it suddenly collapsed, carrying him and other pedestrians with it to the bottom of an open space where he was pinned down by the flagstones which had fallen with and upon him. He has recovered damages upon the theory of the defendants’ negligence, it being his contention that the space into which he fell was a vault and that the defendants were responsible for its presence and condition. The city of New York was also a party defendant, but the jury found in its favor, and from that finding the plaintiff has not appealed. The complaint alleges negligence upon the part of the defendants now appealing in unlawfully and negligently permitting the said sidewalk in front of the premises owned by them to be in an unsafe condition and insufficiently supported, as the result of which the plaintiff, who was then and there lawfully passing along said sidewalk of the street in front of these premises, was precipitated into a vault or cavern underneath said sidewalk caused by the caving in of said sidewalk; that the plaintiff’s injuries were sustained by reason of, and wholly through, the carelessness and negligence of the defendants, their agents and servants, in the construction and maintenance of said sidewalk in front of said premises, and by reason of the failure on the part of defendants to have the said sidewalk sufficiently supported, and by reason of the defendants allowing a deep vault to be and remain under said sidewalk, and by reason of the failure on the part of defendants to comply with the city ordinances in such cases made and provided.

In its charge the trial court said: “As to the defendants, the property owners. In order to hold them chargeable with negligence, you must be satisfied that they either created a condition under the sidewalk which was of such character that a reasonable and prudent person would not have done as they did, or would not have permitted it to remain as they permitted it to remain, and that such condition so created by them, or suffered by them to exist, under the sidewalk, was the cause of the accident from which the plaintiff claims to have received' his injury.”

In accordance with this charge of the court as to the basis for the liability of appellants, the only proof which had been introduced was that the space into which the plaintiff fell, as described by several of the witnesses, looked like a small room with paved walls and cemented corners, about twelve feet square, and that in one wall there was a small doorway in the side of the building. There was also testimony to the effect that the beam which appears to have supported the flagstones, and resting upon which two flagstones still remained after the accident, was old, bent and green, as though covered with moss. There was some proof introduced as to a fire which had taken place in the premises some months prior to the occurrence in question, and as to the condition of the sidewalk thereafter, which, however, was not shown to have had any hearing upon its final collapse. The requirements for fixing the appellants’ liability, as stated by the court, were not satisfactorily met. There was no proof that the appellants had made this opening under the sidewalk; that they had constructed the walls surrounding it; that they had built the doorway said to have existed in one of these walls; that they had used this space for any purpose whatever; or, in fact, that they had any knowledge of its existence. The excavation or room was not upon their property, but under the public highway, and there is not a word of testimony that they ever caused, or contributed to its construction, or that they adopted it, and used it in connection with their building, or that they knew of its existence. If the plaintiff’s proof had justified a finding that the highway itself was defective, the owners of the abutting property would not have been hable, under the authority of City of Rochester v. Campbell (123 N. Y. 405), which held that the primary responsibility for damage occasioned by neglect to keep sidewalks in repair rested upon the municipality and not upon the property owners. Plaintiff has shown no violation of any municipal ordinance by the owners. Until he established such a violation, or showed that appellants either constructed or adopted, used and maintained the space under the sidewalk, he cannot recover. The finding of the owners’ negligence was, therefore, without evidence to support it, and the judgment and order appealed from will be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellants to abide the event.

Ingraham, P. J., Laughlin, Scott and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred.

Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellants to abide event. Order to be settled on notice.  