Filed Date: 6/25/1957
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
(Republished)
The wrong plaintiffs plead in their complaint for damage to their property from flooding is that third-party plaintiff turned on a faucet and permitted it to overflow on the floor in premises which it occupied and controlled. The third-party complaint does not plead a valid cause of action over against the landlord as third-party defendant within the active-passive theory of liability for tort. When the pleadings are read together a joint tort between third-party plaintiff and third-party defendant is to be seen; with the acts of the third-party plaintiff constituting the main element of causation. In this situation there should not be a recovery over. Order unanimously reversed, with $20 costs and disbursements to the appellant, the motion granted, and judgment is directed to he entered in favor of the third-party defendant, Plybridge Corp., dismissing the third-party complaint, with costs. Concur — Botein, J. P., Frank, Valente, McNally and Bergan, JJ. [See ante, p. 998.]