American Contracting Co. v. Sammon

6 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 121, 1905 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 211
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 121 (American Contracting Co. v. Sammon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Contracting Co. v. Sammon, 6 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 121, 1905 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 211 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

Suit was brought in the court of common pleas by Walter Sammon against the King Bridge Company and the American Contracting Company, the petition alleging that the King [122]*122Bridge Company was an organization organized under the laws of the state of Ohio and engaged very extensively in structural iron work of various kinds and entirely responsible pecuniarily; that the defendant, the American Contracting Company, was a corporation in name only; that, .although organized as a corporation under the laws of Ohio, it had a capital stock of but $500; that such company was “a mere formal device instigated, inflated and manipulated by said the King Bridge Company for the purpose of discreetly subletting to it by the King Bridge Company in form of words, occasional contracts, when in the opinion of said the King Bridge Company such subletting might be advisable, to avoid pecuniary responsibility to its employes for its negligent acts of omission and commission and for other like purposes: * * * being officered in form of words by the agents and servants of said the King Bridge Oómpany, and is now and ever has been the creation in fact and mere tool, of said the King Bridge Company, for the purposes above indicated, and for such purposes only.”

The plaintiff further alleges in his petition that “at the time of the accident hereinafter mentioned he was unaware of the existing relations above stated between said defendants, and that though in form of words he was nominally in the employ of said the American Contracting Company, as he now learns, he avers and charges the fact to be, that he was actually doing the work and in the employ of said the King Bridge Company.” Further, the petition alleges that on or about the 30th of November, 1901, the plaintiff, while so engaged in the nominal employment of the American Contracting Company, but in the actual employment of the King Bridge Company, he was required as a part of his duty to climb an iron column to a height of some forty feet above the surface of the ground, and that arriving so that his head was at the top of said column, for the purpose of raising himself he reached with his hand and grasped an iron plate, which should have been firmly bolted to said column, but which in fact was not so bolted, and by reason thereof it slipped from the top of the column and was precipitated with him to the ground, whereby he received great [123]*123injuries and for which he brought his suit. The petition alleges that the injuries which he sustained were caused wholly by the negligence of the defendants and were in no wise contributed to by any fault or negligence on his part.

At .the close of the evidence on the part of the plaintiff the court, on motion of the King Bridge Company, arrested the evidence from the jury as to that defendant and entered a judgment in its favor and the case proceeded against the American Contracting Company,, resulting in a verdict and judgment against said last named company, to reverse which the present proceedings is brought.

Objection was made' at the trial on the part of the King Bridge Company to the introduction of any evidence against it under the petition. This objection was overruled and a proper exception taken. The only bearing that this ruling has to the case as it now stands here is as to whether evidence was not permitted against the bridge company, which was prejudicial to the contracting company.

We think it clear that under the petition evidence was admissible as against the King Bridge Company.

It was urged in argument to us that the petition shows that the contracting company was a duly organized corporation and that the plaintiff was, nominally at least, in the employ of that corporation, but what has already been quoted from the petition shows that it was distinctly averred in the petition that the plaintiff was an employe of the bridge company and that the intervention of the contracting company was a mere subterfuge, and that it was organized as a creature of the bridge company, and the.only purpose of its organization was that the bridge company might be relieved from pecuniary liability to any employe injured in performing the work which was really to be done by the bridge company, but which was nominally being done by the contracting company.

It is settled that one who contracts to have work done can not always be relieved from injuries received by an employe in some department of the work by having an independent contractor intervene between the principal contractor and the employe who receives the injury.

[124]*124In C. & C. B. Co. v. Steinbock & Patrick, 61 O. S., 215, the first clause of the syllabus reads:

“Where danger to others is likely to attend the doing of certain work, unless care is observed, the person having it to do, is under a duty to see that it is done with reasonable care, and can not, by the employment of an independent contractor, relieve himself from liability for injuries resulting to others from the negligence of the contractor or his servants.”

And in the opinion in the same case, page 222, Judge Minshall uses this language:

“The doctrine of independent contractor, whereby one who lets work to be done by another, reserving no control over the performance of the work, is not liable to third persons for injuries resulting from the negligence of the contractor or his servants, is subject to several exceptions. One of these * # * is where the employer is, from the nature and character of the wbrk, under a duty to others to see that it is carefully performed.”

And this quotation is made with approval from Cockburn, C. J., in Bower v. Peate, 1 L. R. Q. B. Div., 321:

“ ‘A man who orders work to be executed, from which, in the natural course of things, injurious consequences to his neighbor must be expected to arise, unless means are adopted by which such consequences may be averted, is bound to see to the doing of that which is necessary to prevent mischief,’ ” etc.

Again, on page 223, Judge Minshall says:

“The weight of reason and authority is to the effect that, where a party is under a duty to the public, or a third person, to see that work he is about to do, or have done, is carefully performed so as to. avoid injury to others, he can not, by letting it to a contractor, avoid its liability, in case it is negligently done to the injury of another.”

We think it clear that, if the allegations of the petition as to the relations between the bridge company and the contracting company had been sustained by the evidence the bridge company could not have escaped liability by reason of the contract[125]*125ing company being an independent contractor, and so there was no error in allowing proper evidence to be introduced against the bridge company.

It is said, however, on the part of the plaintiff, in error that even if any evidence was admissible against the bridge company, certain evidence was permitted to go to the jury which was incompetent as against either company and which was prejudicial to the contracting company, though introduced primarily as against the bridge company.

The bill of exceptions does not purport to contain all of the evidence offered but only certain parts of such evidence upon rulings in regard to which complaint is made.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 121, 1905 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-contracting-co-v-sammon-ohcirctcuyahoga-1905.