Covington & Cincinnati Bridge Co. v. Patrick
This text of 5 Ohio N.P. 374 (Covington & Cincinnati Bridge Co. v. Patrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
DEMPSEY, J., concurs; WRIGHT, J, dissents.
The plaintiff in error in this case was the owner of a large five story brick warehouse, located in this city. In August, 1895, the building was partially destroyed by fire, and the east wall of the building was left in a dangerous condition, leaning outward towards an adjoining alley. The support of the wall was also very much weakened by tbe action of the water used to extinguish the fire.
It is conceded that the wall was a menace to persons and property in the vicinity.
In December, 1895, the Bridge Company entered into a written contract with one Hasler, by which the latter agreed to tear down the wall. The contract provided that Hasler should “hold the Bridge Company harmless in case of accident to any person or property during the tearing down and removal of said building.”
Hasler, in pursuance of this contract, undertook the work of tearing down the wall, when the wall fell over across the alley toward which it leaned, and onto the premises of Patrick, 'inflicting upon him serious personal injury.
It was conceded in the trial below, and is conceded in the argument in this court, that Hasler was grossly negligent in the manner in which he carried on the work; and that the falling of the wall was due to his negligence.
[375]*375The case was tried before a jury, and a verdict returned for plaintiff awarding him damages in the sum of §2,000.
It is sought here to reverse this judgment upon the ground that the court erred with respect to a number of propositions of law which it stated in its charge to the jury.
It is one of the elementary rules of the law that a principal is responsible for the acts of his agent when acting within, the scope of his authority; but where a contractor is employed to do a particular thing, that the employer is not responsible for the acts of the contractor — the mle of respondeat superior does not apply, and the contractor is alone responsible.
To this rule, however, there are various exceptions. The subject has recently been under examination by our supreme court in the cases of Railroad Company v. Morey, 47 Ohio St., 207, and Hanover v. Whalen, 49 Ohio St., 69.
One of the exceptions to this general rule, established by authority and consonant to the principle of natural justice, was declared in the case of Railroad Company v. Morey to be:
“That one upon whom the law devolves a duty can not shift it over upon another so as to exonerate himself from the consequences of its non-performance.” S. & R. on Neg., secs. 174-176; Railroad v. Van Dorn, 1 Circuit Ct. Rep., 292; Wood’s Master and Servant, sec. 316; Wharton on Negligence, sec. 185.
It is contended by plaintiff in error that the duty, here referred to is a statutory duty and that the rule must be so limited.
We do not think that such limitation can be made to the rule. In the cases cited bj the court in Railroad Company v. Morey, and which we have just referred to, will be found a number of instances where the rule has been applied to cases where the duty was not one imposed by statute. Aside from authority and viewed in the light of principle, we do not see what sound ground there could be for rules so radically different applying in the case where the duty arose from statute and where the duty arose from contract or from the principles of the common law. The true rule seems to us to be that stated by the court in Railroad Company v. Morey, “that one upon whom the law devolves a duty can not shift it over upon another so as (o exonerate himself from the consequences of its non-performance.” and that it is immaterial whether the duty is imposed, by statute or not, provided it is a duty imposed by law and enforceable in the courts.
The undisputed facts of this case, m our opinion, bring it within the operation of this rule.
The wall was a menace to persons and property in the neighborhood by reason of the impairment of its support. This fact was self-evident, and is conceded. It was likely to fall over at any time. It was a nuisance, and the obligation to remove it was .a duty which .the Bridge Company owed to neighboring persons and property.
It is true the Bridge Company was not the creator of the nuisance. Whether it materially increased the nuisance by allowing it to remain from August to December may perhaps be a question open to dispute. But the fact that the nuisance upon the property of the Bridge Company was created by the act of God, and not by the company, did not make it any the less a nuisance,and did not relieve the companj from a duty to remove it.
It may be conceded for the sake of argument, although it is not necessary to express any opinion upon the subject, that where one creates a nuisance upon his premises, he must remove it at his peril, and that his duty is not discharged by the exercise of ordinary care; as for instance where he collects and stores upon his premises inanimate substances or animate things from the escape of which injury is likely to follow (the Defiance Water Company v. Olinger, 54 Ohio St., 538); but that where the nuisance is created by the act of God,his duty is discharged if he exercises ordinary care in its removal. We are not concerned in this case as to which is the standard of his duty; because, if the act of the contractor here was the act of the Bridge Company, inasmuch as it is conceded that the contractor did not exercise ordinary care in the removal of the wall, the Bridge Company would be liable.
It is urged, however, that conceding it to be the duty of the Bridge Company to remove the wall, nevertheless it discharged such duty when it exercised ordinary care to select a competent contractor, and that as it is not disputed but that the Bridge Company did exercise such care in the selection of the contractor, it can not be held liable, and that the-court should have instructed the jury to return a verdict for tfce Bridge Company.
We think the answer to this argument is found in the mere statement of the principle that where a duty is incumbent upon a person he can not shift it. Por to say that he can employ another person, however careful he may be in his selection, and thus relieve himself of responsibility, is in effect to say that he can shift the burden from himself to such person so employed.
One conclusion in this case is that the wall being a constant menace to the lives and property of those in the neighborhood, and likely to fall at any time, it was in fact and in law a nuisance; that its removal became a duty incumbent upon the Bridge Company ; and being a duty incumbent upon it, such duty could not be shifted upon a contractor or any other person ; that there fore the acts of the contractor were the acts of the Bridge Company, and that as the contractor was by admission of all parties guilty of negligence in the removal of the wall, and that by reason of such negligence the wall fell over and injured the plaintiff, the only question open for the determination of the jury was the amount of damage to [376]*376which the defendant in error was entitled. This amount having been 'determined by the jury, and not being excessive, the verdict should be allowed to stand.
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5 Ohio N.P. 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/covington-cincinnati-bridge-co-v-patrick-ohsuperctcinci-1898.