Boulch v. John B. Gutmann Construction Company

366 S.W.2d 21, 1963 Mo. App. LEXIS 562
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 19, 1963
Docket31097, 31098
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 366 S.W.2d 21 (Boulch v. John B. Gutmann Construction Company) 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
Boulch v. John B. Gutmann Construction Company, 366 S.W.2d 21, 1963 Mo. App. LEXIS 562 (Mo. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

RUDDY, Acting Presiding Judge.

Marie Boulch and Thomas H. Boulch, her husband, brought this action against St. Elizabeth’s Academy, a corporation; John B. Gutmann Construction Company, Inc., a corporation; and Richard E. Harder doing business as Richard E. Harder Contracting Company.

In the first count of the petition Marie Boulch alleged that she fell on a sidewalk and that she was caused to slip and fall by reason of the muddy condition of the sidewalk, which condition said plaintiff alleged was due to the carelessness and negligence of defendants and each of them. In this count Marie Boulch claimed damages for personal injuries sustained by her when she fell. Count II of the petition was for damages sustained by Thomas H. Boulch on account of the injuries sustained by his wife.

A trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of Marie Boulch on Count I of the petition in the sum of $10,000 and in favor of Thomas H. Boulch on Count II of the petition in the sum of $5000. Both verdicts were against the defendants, John B. Gutmann Construction Company, Inc., and Richard E. Harder, doing business as Richard E. Harder Contracting Company. A motion to dismiss the action against the St. Elizabeth’s Academy, *24 a corporation, filed at the close of all the evidence in the case was sustained by the trial court.

Defendants John B. Gutmann Construction Company and Richard E. Harder, doing business as Richard E. Harder Contracting Company have appealed from the j udgment.

One of the points relied on by both of the defendants is that the plaintiffs have failed to make a submissible case against them and each of them and that the trial court erred in overruling their .respective motions for a directed verdict.

We shall refer to defendant, John B. Gutmann Construction Company, a corporation, as the Gutmann Company and Richard E. Harder, doing business as Richard E. Harder Contracting Company, as Harder.

St. Elizabeth’s Academy owns and operates an educational institution in the City of St. Louis. The properties owned by the Academy are bounded on the south by Arsenal Street, on the north by Pestalozzi Street, on the east by Louisiana Avenue and on the west by Tennessee Avenue. St. Elizabeth’s Academy was engaged in the construction of a gymnasium and the remodeling of some of its buildings. Preceding the new construction, some old buildings were razed and excavations were made for the new buildings. There were two driveways leading into and out of the premises on to Louisiana Avenue, one of them within 100 feet of Pestalozzi Street and the other within 70 or 80 feet of Arsenal Street. There was considerable difference of opinion as to the use of the driveway close to Pestalozzi Street by the trucks of defendant Harder. However, considering the testimony which is favorable to the plaintiff, there was evidence to show that the trucks of Harder used this driveway in hauling mud out of the excavation.

Some time prior to February 1st, 1957, the Gutmann Company, as general contractor, was engaged by the St. Elizabeth’s Academy under a written contract to do the construction and remodeling of the buildings. Harder was engaged in the business of digging excavations and pile drilling and was a successful bidder to do this work as subcontractor under the general contract procured by the Gutmann Company.

The evidence shows that the excavation did not go any lower than the level of the-adjacent streets and that it was necessary because the ground on which the Academy was situated was generally higher than the level of the surrounding streets.

While the excavation work was being-performed defendant Harder was personally present every day that work was done under the subcontract. He had a labor foreman on the job who would supervise the work of his employees. The foreman of the Gutmann Company gave to Harder and his employees the lines and the grades-to be followed in the excavation work. In this connection the foreman of the Gut-mann Company told Harder and his employees how deep to excavate and where to excavate, but the details of how it was-to be done were left to Harder’s control and direction. Harder was told by the foreman-of the Gutmann Company to store some of the dirt and mud, that was being excavated, on the premises to be used for “back fills”' and Harder and his employees were told by Gutmann’s foreman where to store the dirt and mud on the premises. Harder said that beyond telling him and his employees where to dig and how deep to dig and where to store the mud on the premises, no other control was exercised by the Gut-mann Company in the work of the excavation under the subcontract.

The Gutmann Company through its employees did not tell Harder what route to-follow when the trucks took the dirt and mud off the premises, nor did they exercise any other type of control over the-trucks when leaving the premises. Harder admitted that the Gutmann Company’s foreman was present at all times to check whether the work done by Plarder com *25 plied with the specifications on the job. The evidence shows that at no time did the Gutmann Company or its employees tell Harder how many trucks to use or how fast he should do the work. At no time did the Gutmann Company or its employees tell Harder’s truck drivers where to go or what to do. The men who operated the trucks that carried the dirt and mud from the described premises were employees of Harder and were paid by him. In the course of the excavation work under the subcontract Harder used the blue prints and written specifications that were provided for the construction of the buildings. At no time during the entire excavation work did any trucks take dirt and mud off the premises of the St. Elizabeth’s Academy other than those belonging to or under the control of Harder.

John B. Gutmann, President of the Gut-mann Company, testified that, as general contractor, his firm, through its employees, watched over the job and the work of the subcontractors and in connection with the subcontractor doing the excavation his employees saw to it that the excavator started at the proper location and followed all the marks laid out for excavation and saw to it that he would dig to the proper depth and that his company as general contractor watched to see that the subcontractor in the course of the excavation did not go beyond the prescribed bounds for the building.

For several weeks prior to February 1, 1957, the date on which plaintiff, Marie Boulch, fell, it had snowed intermittently and during that period the weather was cold. The testimony of witnesses showed that ice and snow had formed on the streets and on the sidewalk in the area of the Academy. The trucks owned or controlled by Harder were carrying the dirt and mud from the excavated places on the premises of the Academy out through the driveways and over Louisiana Avenue. The mud was described by various witnesses as “clay colored,” “brown clay,” and was seen falling from some of the trucks as they traveled over Louisiana Avenue and this mud was also seen at the intersection of Louisiana Avenue and Pestalozzi Street, especially at the south crosswalk of that intersection. Harder admitted that mud would drop from the trucks as they moved along the street. The trucks used were equipped with dual wheels on the rear and the evidence showed that mud would lodge between the dual wheels and as the trucks traveled, the mud would loosen and would be thrown onto

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Bluebook (online)
366 S.W.2d 21, 1963 Mo. App. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boulch-v-john-b-gutmann-construction-company-moctapp-1963.