Baer v. Schaap

106 N.W.2d 468, 171 Neb. 347, 1960 Neb. LEXIS 37
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1960
Docket34497
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 106 N.W.2d 468 (Baer v. Schaap) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baer v. Schaap, 106 N.W.2d 468, 171 Neb. 347, 1960 Neb. LEXIS 37 (Neb. 1960).

Opinions

Simmons, C. J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries. Our first decision in this case is found in Baer v. Schaap, 168 Neb. 578, 97 N. W. 2d 207. A rehearing was granted. The motion for rehearing presents only two questions. The first is the sufficiency of the evidence to justify submitting the cause to the jury. We now find it necessary to decide only that question. We conclude that our former decision was in error in holding the evidence sufficient. That decision is set aside.

We reverse the judgment and remand the cause with directions to sustain the motion for a directed verdict.

We refer to our former opinion and the dissent for a more detailed general statement of the issues and facts.

We refer herein to plaintiff as Baer, who was the [349]*349injured employee of defendant Parsons Construction Company. We refer to defendant Sehaap as Speedway, as he operated under the name of Speedway Scaffold Company. Appellee Parsons Construction Company is referred to as Parsons. It is in the case seeking subrogation for compensation payments to Baer. To that extent Parsons’ interests and Baer’s interests are identical.

Baer alleged that Speedway “erected, set in place, and rented to” Parsons certain scaffolding around a building being remodeled and that the scaffolding “thus erected” was “not erected in a safe, suitable and proper manner,” so that a plank thereon gave way and dropped plaintiff to the sidewalk below to his great injury. That allegation presented the essential issue and limits the scope of the inquiry.

We are presented with two difficulties appearing in the record. The accident involved herein occurred in September 1954. The petition was filed in June 1955. The cause was at issue in February 1956. It was tried in January 1958 on amended pleadings. The delay in bringing this matter to trial obviously accounts for some if not all of the confusion, lack of memory, and contradictory statements of witnesses. Trial courts could avoid this sort of a situation by insisting on a reasonably prompt trial in these cases.

Repeatedly in this record witnesses refer to exhibits, pointing out that about which they are testifying, and “indicating” it. We have repeatedly criticized trial courts for permitting such a record to be made. It is difficult, and at times impossible, for a reviewing court to read such a record and do more than speculate as to what lawyers, court, and jury had indicated to them. We again criticize the procedure here in that regard.

The first question here is: Did Speedway place the plank in the scaffold that upended and caused Baer to fall?

The parties are in general agreement that Speedway [350]*350built a scaffold for Parsons; that Parsons accepted and used it; that Baer was an employee of Parsons; and that a plank on which he was standing gave way, causing him to fall to his injury.

There is further general agreement that the scaffolding was built of steel uprights, 7 feet apart lengthwise, and 5 feet apart from side to side. The uprights were connected by horizontal steel bars upon which the scaffold floor boards were placed.

It was agreed at the bar here and in the briefs that the scaffold was erected about 2 feet from the building and that steel brackets were placed on the scaffold to reach from the inside upright to the building. These were in the shape of a right-angled triangle with the top arm at right angles to the building and about 22 inches in length. Speedway floored the scaffold proper with planks 2 inches thick and either 10 or 12 inches in width, and 14 and 16 feet long. This becomes important in the light of evidence to be cited later.

It is undisputed that Speedway put 16-foot-long planks side by side across two of the 7-foot spaces between the supporting uprights so that they extended 1 foot at each end beyond the crossbars on which they rested. Then two spaces were skipped and another side-by-side row of 16-foot-long planks were placed as before. Then 14-foot-long planks were placed bridging that opening. These lapped over the 16-foot planks 1 foot at each end.

Speedway’s construction man testified that every one of the 14-foot-long planks was nailed to the 16-foot plank beneath it. Parsons’ superintendent inspected the scaffold and testified that he found from 5 to 10 percent of the planks not nailed, and nailed them. It is, then, undisputed except by argument, that before Parsons began the use of this platform every 14-foot plank which Speedway put in the scaffold was nailed to the 16-foot plank beneath it and that the overlap was 1 foot.

We must accept as a fact from the jury’s verdict that Speedway did not nail all of the planks and that Parsons [351]*351undertook to do so before it permitted its use by workmen. Parsons accepted the scaffold as satisfactorily constructed.

At this point the purpose of the nailing can be recited. It is likewise undisputed and testified to by a witness for Baer that the planks were nailed if employees were going to work on them for a long time and should be nailed if it was a matter of weeks and days “because they will work” or slide back and forth so that “one end may drop.” It was in the interest of good safety to nail them down.

We are, then, confronted with a record that establishes without dispute that every 14-foot plank was above the end of a 16-foot plank and any “working” of it would be against the force of gravity and that the 14-foot plank would have to “work” at least 1 foot before it could upend and fall.

We are mindful of the testimony of Baer’s witness that he measured the plank that flipped up as 14 feet in length so that if it slipped “an inch or so either way” it would upend and fall.

From this evidence it is argued here that the plank which upended had only a 1-inch overlap and had to slip only that distance before it would give away on its loose end.

The fallacy of this argument is that under the undisputed evidence the plank, if put there by Speedway, would have had to slip at least 1 foot before it would upend and fall when someone got on its short end, there being no evidence that any other plank on the platform was disturbed when the one plank gave way. There is no evidence that Speedway put 14-foot planks at this point in any other position than overlapping 16-foot planks. No witness testified that the plank that upended had been resting on a 16-foot plank.

Baer’s witness and Parsons’ superintendent testified to the fact that the planks were nailed together; and no one testified that a- nailed plank will “work.” We are [352]*352not unmindful of the fact that Baer’s witness testified that there were neither nails nor nail holes in the plank that upended. From that evidence, however, no inference can arise that Speedway placed this plank in the scaffold.

Were there side brackets put on the scaffold by Speedway? It is conceded here that the answer is “Yes.” Baer testified that he was an experienced construction man, had erected and used scaffolds for years, and was an experienced bricklayer and foreman at the time of the accident.

The conceded physical facts are that the scaffold was to be used in removing and repairing the wall of the building and that in part an overhanging cornice was to be removed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 N.W.2d 468, 171 Neb. 347, 1960 Neb. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baer-v-schaap-neb-1960.