Busch & Latta Painting Co. v. Woermann Construction Co.

276 S.W. 614, 310 Mo. 419, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 887
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 6, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 614 (Busch & Latta Painting Co. v. Woermann Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Busch & Latta Painting Co. v. Woermann Construction Co., 276 S.W. 614, 310 Mo. 419, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 887 (Mo. 1925).

Opinion

*427 WHITE, J.

This suit is for indemnity. The plaintiff/employed the defendant to construct a scaffold for the use of the plaintiff’s employees. The scaffold collapsed and injured two of said employees; plaintiff paid their claims for damages, sued the defendant for the amount so paid, and recovered judgment, October 11, 1922, for $7879. The defendant appealed.

The plaintiff, a corporation, engaged in the painting business, had a contract to clean and paint the ceiling of the Merchants Exchange Building, in St. Louis. The room was 210 feet long, 90 feet wide, and about 70 feet from the floor to the ceiling. A balcony encircled the room about thirty feet from the floor. This balcony was between 2% and 3% feet wide. The plaintiff was confronted with the problem of how to construct a scaffold by means of which the ceiling could be cleaned and painted. The president of the plaintiff, Mr. Latta, consulted with the manager of the defendant, Mr. Martin, for the purpose of having a scaffold erected which would answer that purpose; building of scaffolds was in the line of the defendant’s business. It was necessary to make a scafford which would span the space the short way of the room from balcony to balcony. Mr. Latta suggested that movable towers should be built from the floor of the building, so that a scaffold resting upon them and upon the balcony at the sides could be moved as the work progressed. Mr. Martin said that was not practicable, and the • conference resulted in an arrangement whereby defendant constructed a scaffold. It was about twelve feet wide and extended clear across the building from side to side, more than eighty feet. At each end of the scaffold were uprights, built upon two by tens, which lay upon rollers, called dollies; from these uprights “trus *428 ses” extended across the room from balcony to balcony, and upon these the bracing and frame work of the scaffold was built high enough so that upon a platform at the top the painters could stand and reach the ceiling. This scaffold was placed at one end of the building, the purpose being that when work above the scaffold had been finished, it could by means of the rollers be moved along the balcony and the work begun in a new place.

The first day the men employed by plaintiff worked on the scaffold, and before they quit at night they moved it by “pinching” it along, one man at each end using a crowbar. The next morning the men moved the scaffold a little further and then mounted it to go on with their work. In a short time it collapsed, precipitating to the floor two of the painters, plaintiff’s emloyees, William Ellrich and Henry Karl. Both men were severely injured and brought suit in the Circuit Court of the City, of St. Louis against the plaintiff and the defendant for damages. Before these cases came to trial the plaintiff and defendant effected a settlement with the men. By that settlement Karl was paid $2,00:0', and Ellrich was paid $12,000. It is alleged in plaintiff’s petition that the defendant paid $1,000 of the amount paid Karl, and $6500' of the amount paid to Ellrich, and that the plaintiff paid $1,000' of the amount paid Karl, and $5500 of the amount paid Ellrich. Plaintiff also paid the $979 to the Merchants 'Exchange for damage done to the building when the scaffold collapsed, and also paid $475 for legal services, and $54.35 court costs in the Ellrich case It also paid $150' for legal services in the Karl case, and $40 for depositions and commissioner’s fees and medical services in connection with the Karl case. The suit is for $5500 paid Ellrich, $1000 paid Karl, and the other items mentioned, totaling $8208.35, demanded in the petition, while the verdict returned and the judgment. were for $7879.

After the settlement with E’llrich and Karl the plaintiff and defendant entered into a contract in regard to each case. After reciting the payments, etc., the agree *429 ment in regard to the Karl case provides that neither party by such payment will “be prejudiced in reference to any claim that either has or may have ag’ainst the other in the premises.” It then provides that each shall pay one thousand dollars towards the settlement of Karl, and that the sum is a reasonable compensation for his injuries; that by contributing’ the sum mentioned neither party admits that the collapse of the scaffold was due to its negligence. The contract then contains the following stipulation:

“(d) It is agreed, however, between the parties, that in any case party of the first part shall hereafter make claim against party of the second part to recover the amount so contributed by the former toward the settlement of said suit of' Henry Karl, the party of the second part shall be estopped to deny the right of said Henry Karl to recover in said suit against the party of the first part.”

The party of the first part mentioned is the plain tiff here, and the party of the second part is the defendant here. It is then provided that the party of the first part by contributing that sum did not waive any right it might have to recover from the party of the second part the amount contributed in the settlement, and that the party of the second part by contributing.to the settlement did not waive any right to recover from the party of the first part the amount contributed. The same stipulations were made in the contract regarding the settlement of the Ellrich claim where it was recited that the party of the first part contributed the sum of $5500, and the party of the second part $6500 in settlement.

The petition alleged, and the evidence offered by plaintiff tends to prove, that the collapse of the scaffold was due to the timbers which composed it being fastended together with nails instead of with bolts; that the expanse of more than eighty feet spanned by those. timbers and braces was too great for the weight of the scaffold and its load, and the nails pulled out. The scaf *430 fold afterwards was rebuilt with bolts instead of nails, and then was used' successfully without further trouble. The plaintiff offered expert evidence tending- to show that the scaffold, as constructed, was not reasonably safe.

The defendant offered evidence to show that the scaffold was not properly moved, but was moved in a way to cause the nails to become insecure by putting an unnecessary strain upon them. It was shown that in pinching- the scaffold along’ on the rollers, one end got as much as a foot ahead of the other end. Defendant claims this weakened the structure. The end which was behind was properly moved up before the men mounted the scaffold. It was further shown that heavy wires depended from -the ceiling towards the floor of the building, upon which chandeliers had been hung; that in moving the scaffold the flooring upon which the men stood came in contact with one of those hanging wires which somehow got fastened in the edge of the platform and attracted the attention of the men by a “click” or noise it made. One of the men kicked it loose and dropped it down on the other side of the scaffold so that it gave no further trouble. The evidence is not clear as to just what effect contact of that wire with the scaffold had.

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 614, 310 Mo. 419, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/busch-latta-painting-co-v-woermann-construction-co-mo-1925.