Butz v. Murch Bros. Construction Co.

117 S.W. 635, 137 Mo. App. 222, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 201
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 23, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 117 S.W. 635 (Butz v. Murch Bros. Construction Co.) 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
Butz v. Murch Bros. Construction Co., 117 S.W. 635, 137 Mo. App. 222, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 201 (Mo. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

— Plaintiff was hurt in a fall from the third story of a building which was being erected in the city of St. Louis. He was working on the building in the employ of defendant company, which was putting up the house. A temporary floor had been laid in the third story and was there during the progress of the work; but the day before the accident, and on said day, part of this flooring, the evidence is conflicting as to how much, had been taken up to permit the permanent floor to be laid. Many expert witnesses said all the temporary floor had to be removed before the permanent one could be put down, and said, too, it was usual to-do this in erecting a building. The tendency of the testimoney for defendant company was to acquit it of negligence in respect of removing the floor first laid, and which had been put down for the protection of workmen in obedience to an ordinance of the city of St. Louis, requiring any person having charge of the construction of a building, to cover the joists or girders above the second floor with scaffold boards or other suitable ma[224]*224terial as the building progressed, so as to sufficiently protect Avorkmen in the upper stories from falling through the joists or girders and the Avorkmen beloAV from the fall of loose material. Plaintiff Avas injured in this manner; a ladder ascended from the second floor to the third and another ladder from the latter floor to the roof and both were used by the employees engaged on the building. Part of the temporary floor had been left about the spot where the loAver ladder emerged into the third story and the upper one arose toAvard the roof, forming a platform there, but the testimony varies regarding its dimensions, some witnesses saying it was sixteen or ninteen feet by thirty-two feet; whereas others said it was much smaller. The floor was fifty feet wide by eighty feet long and a portion of it had been stripped, but Avhere stripped, some loose boards lay across the girders in places. The girders which ran lengthwise of the building were fifteen feet apart and these were intersected by crosswise girders some seven feet apart. They Avere from twelve to fourteen inches wide and might be walked on by a workman, though there would be danger of a misstep or a slip. Plaintiff Avas at work upon the platform near the foot of the ladder leading to the roof and his foreman was at work on the roof. The látter called to plaintiff to hand up some boards twelve feet long for use on the roof. Just where these boards were to be had is uncertain. Witnesses for defendant said a pile of boards lay near the foot of the ladder and plaintiff Avould not have to step off the platform to reach them; but according to plaintiff he was compelled to go about the room and gather them from Avhere they had been left here and there. He had handed up two of the planks and was walking, he said, toward the platform Avith a third, Avhen he stepped on a plank •five inches wide which lay across the girders and this plank gave way with him, he did not say whether by 'breaking, slipping or turning, letting him fall to the basement beloAV to his serious injury. He alleges de[225]*225fendant- violated the city ordinance in failing to have the girders and joists sufficiently covered with hoards while the work progressed, to prevent him and the other workmen from falling through. In defense the answer says the extent to which the joists and girders were covered and uncovered was plainly open, visible and obvious to plaintiff, and he assumed the risk of injury in working and walking about the floor; further that his injuries were sustained as the direct result of his own want of ordinary care in going on and walking over the uncovered portion of the floor. Plaintiff had judgment in the court below and' defendant appealed.

One of the principal assignments of error is the refusal of the court to direct a verdict for defendant. The argument for this assignment assumes the evidence shows, beyond inference to the contrary, defendant had kept the third floor covered with boards, so as to protect workmen, until it became necessary to remove the boards in order to lay the permanent floor. We agree ivith counsel for defendant, the ordinance must not be construed to impose on defendant the duty of keeping the temporary flooring in place at all hazards as long as workmen were engaged in the upper part of the building, even though to do so would interfere with or prevent the laying of the permanent floor. The court below instructed on this theory, but submitted as an issue of fact the question of whether it had become necessary, before plaintiff fell, to uncover the girders to the extent the jury might find had been done. It is further argued a verdict for defendant should have been ordered because the evidence shoAvs the uncovering of the floor had nothing to do with plaintiff’s injury, since his own testimony proved he fell in consequence of stepping on a board only five inches Avide, Avhich lay loose across the girders, when he might have Avalked on the stanch twelve-inch girders themselves; thereby either doing a negligent act or assuming the risk of using an insecure [226]*226footing in preference to a secure one. These questions were determined by the Supreme Court on a former appeal of the case and we cannot, with propriety, discuss them on their merits. Counsel for defendant say the Supreme Court did not have the full facts of the case before it and hence the decision it gave is not controlling. What is especially emphasized at this point, is the supposed absence from the former record of proof that plaintiff might have walked on the broad joists and girders instead of the precarious board. The Supreme Court did not say much about this circumstance in its opinion, but we know it was in proof, for in describing the condition of the building, the opinion says: “The main girders for the floor, of yellow pine, twelve by fourteen inches running lengthways of the building and from fourteen to sixteen feet apart, with cross girders or joists about seven feet apart, were in place without any covering over them or the spaces between them, except that here and there were some loose boards, at distances varying from eight to twenty feet apart on the joists or girders and across the spaces between them.” The opinion next relates the manner in which plaintiff was hurt, as we have related it. It thus appears the record the Supreme Court passed on contained the evidence to which defendant now attaches so much importance. At the first trial the court ordered a verdict for defendant, whereupon plaintiff took a nonsuit with leave, and after-wards appealed; the question for decision being whether or not the case should have been submitted to the jury and the ruling was it should have been. That judgment is the law of the case. [Butz v. Const. Co., 199 Mo. 279.]

In the first instruction for plaintiff the jury were. thus advised: if they found plaintiff was, on June 9, 1903, in the service of defendant on the third floor of the building mentioned in the evidence, and defendant was in charge of the construction of the building, and it was part of plaintiff’s duty to work on said floor; [227]*227and further found “defendant did not have the joists or girders of said floor covered with scaffold hoards or other suitable material, as the building progressed, and at said

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275 S.W. 67 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1925)
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176 S.W. 399 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 S.W. 635, 137 Mo. App. 222, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butz-v-murch-bros-construction-co-moctapp-1909.