Judges: Carpinello
Filed Date: 4/15/1999
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Cross appeals from a judgment of the Supreme Court (Cobb, J.), entered January 6, 1998 in Greene County, which partially granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment and denied plaintiffs’ cross motion for summary judgment.
On September 8, 1994, the Landmark Restaurant in Greene County was destroyed by fire. Plaintiffs, Colonial Indemnity Insurance Company and Midrox Insurance Company, are the respective subrogees of the owners of the building (Pasquale Sala and Maria Sala) and the lessee of the restaurant (Route 23 Corporation). When the Salas purchased the property in October 1972, a wooden telephone booth containing a pay telephone and coin box was already present in the restaurant. The record does not indicate the precise date the booth and phone had been installed; it is undisputed, however, that they were in fact installed by New York Telephone Company. It is further undisputed that the phone and coin box were removed by New York Telephone Company service technician Todd Delisio on February 7, 1992. The wooden booth, however, remained in the restaurant because the Salas would not cooperate in its removal.
Claiming that the fire was caused by the defective condition of “the telephone and/or telephone booth”, plaintiffs commenced this action against defendant sounding in negligence, breach of warranties and strict products liability. Following defendant’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint and plaintiffs’ cross motion for partial summary judgment on their negligence cause of action, Supreme Court dismissed the negligence and warranty claims, but found that questions of fact precluded dismissal of the strict products liability cause of action. These cross appeals ensued.
The cause and origin of this fire are seriously disputed and
After defendant served its motion, plaintiffs served amended answers to interrogatories and cross-moved for summary judgment, changing somewhat their theory of liability. Through two expert witnesses, plaintiffs asserted that the fire originated at the top of the booth and that its sole cause was the electrical cable providing power to the booth. Specifically, it was opined that the power cable itself (as opposed to the manner of placement) was defective because its insulation was inade: quate and had degraded, it was not designed to be used as a power cord and it was not designed to be annexed to a three-pronged male attachment plug. Notably, the offending power cable was precisely defined by plaintiffs to be a 12-foot long “American Wire Gauge — #14 Solid Copper NM Cable”.
For the purpose of proving its entitlement to summary judgment on the strict products liability claim, defendant accepted plaintiffs’ altered theory as true. In so doing, it claimed that it was nonetheless entitled to summary judgment because there was a material alteration to the booth subsequent to its being manufactured — i.e„, its standard rubber cord was replaced with heavy duty, solid copper cable — and that this alteration was the. proximate cause of the fire. Supreme Court rejected this contention finding lack of record proof “as to the condition of the booth when it was originally delivered to the subject premises”. While it is true that defendant could not establish
A manufacturer cannot be held liable in negligence or strict products liability “where, after the product leaves the possession and control of the manufacturer, there is a subsequent modification which substantially alters the product and is the proximate cause of the plaintiff[s’] injuries” (Robinson v Reed-Prentice Div. of Package Mach. Co., 49 NY2d 471, 475). Notably, Delisio averred that when he removed the phone and coin box on February 7, 1992, he observed that it was equipped with a standard rubber insulated power cord which terminated in a grounded, three-prong receptacle plug.
Thus, given the unrefuted evidence that a standard rubber cord, and not the offending solid copper cable, was on the booth when Delisio removed the phone and coin box in 1992, it was at some point in time thereafter that the wiring to the booth was substantially modified with the installation of the purportedly degrading, heavy-duty solid copper cable. With documentary and testimonial proof that it did not service this particular booth or engage in any electrical wiring of its booths, defendant sufficiently established that it was not responsible for the modification. This showing also went unrefuted. Although the Salas both averred that they never modified the booth or directed their employees to do so, this does not satisfactorily rebut defendant’s showing that it was not responsible for replacing the cord. Moreover, we note that plaintiffs leased the restaurant to Nicholas Patestas as of May 15, 1993. Noticeably absent from the record is an affidavit from Patestas averring that neither he nor anyone under his control ever altered the booth’s wiring. The record does reveal, however, that $14,585 worth of electrical work was completed in May 1993 in connection with Patestas’ extensive reconstruction and renovation of the restaurant.
The parties’ remaining contentions are either academic or unpersuasive.
We find it significant that Delisio’s description of the booth’s power cord was attested to before defendant was even aware that plaintiffs’ experts would alter their theory of liability and opine that a 12-foot solid copper cable was found on the booth after the fire.