Bidwell v. Grubb

201 S.W. 579, 198 Mo. App. 655, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 40
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 201 S.W. 579 (Bidwell v. Grubb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bidwell v. Grubb, 201 S.W. 579, 198 Mo. App. 655, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 40 (Mo. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

Action by plaintiff for damages for injuries sustained by the giving away of a wall on which plaintiff was partly resting while engaged in laying a subfloor on a building, the outer walls of which had reached to the third story, the top about [660]*660forty feet from the ground. Plaintiff’s employer, the defendant, was the contractor for doing the carpenter work in connection with the erection of an addition to Lindenwood College in St. Charles. The general contractor for the .work was the Westlake Construction Company and one Reinschmidt was contractor for erecting the walls. Plaintiff, who was an experienced carpenter, had been working on the building some six weeks or more at. the time of the accident. As the work progressed on the building it was necessary for the carpenters to lay joists, these joists resting on the brick walls. The building in question ran east and west, the front to the east. Its width was from north to south. The joists ran north and south parallel to each other and about sixteen inches apart and were inserted in the north and south walls. At the time of the accident to plaintiff the joists for the third floor were in position, and plaintiff and other carpenters were engaged in laying a subfloor on them. This subfloor started at the southeast corner of the building and the boards composing it were laid diagonally, one end resting on the west wall, the other on the south wall. The planks' of this subfloor were six inches wide. It was necessary to saw off the south end of each plank at right angles in laying them. At the time in question about fifteen of these boards in this subfloor had been laid, covering about ten feet of the joists from the corner. The usual way of laying these boards, it seems, was to nail them down, then mark off a line just inside the wall and saw off the ends. That was the way plaintiff had been doing the work, when the foreman of the job, who was immediately over plaintiff, came up to him and told him that he should saw the boards as he went along, where he was leaving them to. just stick over the wall. To quote the exact language of the foreman, as testified to by plaintiff, the foreman told him not to lay the boards in the way he was doing it, but to go ahead and saw off each, board as he went. Plaintiff testified that before that he had been leaving them stick over the wall and after a section of them [661]*661was laid lie would then saw them off, but the foreman changed this by directing him to saw each board as he went along.

A witness for plaintiff, who was assisting plaintiff in the work, testified to practically the same thing, that is, that the foreman came around and told them to saw the hoards as they went along, and after that they sawed one board at a time,. holding it up and sawing it. This witness further testified that the usual way they had worked before the foreman had given them this direction, was to run it over and cut it after it was laid, standing on the top of the floor and cutting it; that doing it the way the foreman directed, however, plaintiff being right-handed, was obliged to rest his left foot or leg on the wall','kneeling with his right knee on the boards in place, as we understand it. It is very difficult to understand from the testimony whether plaintiff, when he.was sawing off this board, had nailed it, or whether it was loose, but in the view we take of it we do not think that that is very material. The material fact in the case is, that the evidence on the part of plaintiff tends to show that in order to saw the board in the manner directed' by the foreman, it was necessary for him to place one foot on the top of the wall so that his weight rested partly on that and partly on the knee of his right leg, which it appears was on the flooring. As to that the evidence is not very clear. At any rate, while the plaintiff was so engaged the top of the wall gave way, and he was precipitated to the ground, receiving the injuries of which he complains and on account of which he brought this action.

There are two acts of negligence charged in the petition in the following language:

“1. The defendant negligently failed to furnish and provide the plaintiff with a suitable, proper and safe place in which to work, in that said place, where plaintiff was sent to do the said work, as aforesaid, was not a suitable, safe and proper place in which to carry on the work of sawing the boards as aforesaid, [662]*662inasmuch as the brick wall on which it was necessary, as aforesaid, for plaintiff to stand or kneel or rest was loose and unsafe, which the defendant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence, could have known.
“2. Plaintiff further states that said place where he was ordered to work by defendant was dangerous, to the safety of plaintiff, by reason of the fact that plaintiff while in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety, in doing said work, as directed by the defendant, was likely to fall from said wall, a great distance to the ground and to be injured by. losing his balance on said wall, or slipping therefrom, or by the bricks on top of said wall 'turning under the weight of plaintiff’s bpdy; that defendant either knew or. by the exercise of ordinary care ought to have known, of the dangers of said place in which he had ordered said plaintiff to do said work, as aforesaid. Plaintiff further states that his fall from said wall to the ground, and his subsequent injuries, were directly caused by the carelessness and negligence of the defendant in ordering the plaintiff to do said work in said dangerous place, as aforesaid.” (Italics ours.)

At the conclusion of the testimony defendant offered an instruction in the nature of a demurrer, which was refused, defendant excepting. At the instance of plaintiff the court gave five instructions and gave a number at the instance of defendant. It refused four asked by defendant and of its own motion gave the usual instruction as to the number of jurors necessary to-concur in a verdict.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $3500, judgment following. Defendant,, filing a motion for new trial, excepted to its being overruled and has duly appealed.

There were no formal assignments of error made by learned counsel for appellant but they have made and argued ten points.

The first and second are to the effect that the obligation of the employer to furnish a reasonably safe [663]*663place, does not apply where the employee is upon premises that are under-the exclusive control of a third party, and that the obligation of the employer to furnish a reasonably safe place, does not apply where a building is in course of erection and conditions are constantly shifting. Taking up the last proposition first, while that is good law, it is not applicable here, for there is no evidence that the conditions were constantly shifting while this work was going on. The brick-work in the wall had been laid on Friday; the accident happened, on the following Monday, so there was no change in the condition of the wall. If it is meant by this proposition that the conditions were changed by the fact that laying the several planks on this subfloor, that is not such a change in condition as is contemplated by the authorities cited and referred to. If it is meant by this that these were changed by the directions which the foreman gave, the answer is that it was in consequence of that order that the plaintiff was doing the work in the manner which resulted in the accident;

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W. 579, 198 Mo. App. 655, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bidwell-v-grubb-moctapp-1918.