Elliott v. Sawyer

77 A. 782, 107 Me. 195, 1910 Me. LEXIS 93
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 10, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 77 A. 782 (Elliott v. Sawyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elliott v. Sawyer, 77 A. 782, 107 Me. 195, 1910 Me. LEXIS 93 (Me. 1910).

Opinion

Savage, J.

Case for personal injuries. The defendant was a contractor, engaged in building a brick addition to the Eastern Maine General Hospital at Bangor. The plaintiff was a brick mason employed in that work by the defendant. A staging on which the plaintiff was at work collapsed, or "jackknifed” as the witnesses termed it, and the plaintiff was thrown to the ground, a distance of about thirty-five feet, receiving thereby serious injuries. The plaintiff claims, and all the evidence tends to show that the cause of the collapse was the fact that at that time the staging was not properly stayed. The verdict was for the plaintiff, and the case comes up on defendant’s motion for a new trial, and on his exceptions.

There is not much dispute about the material facts. We think the evidence warrants the following statement. The general method of construction of the stage from the ground was as follows : Six or eight feet from the wall of the building tall poles were set up. Close to the wall pieces of lumber each four and one-half feet long were placed upright at suitable intervals. Short sticks called putlogs to support the flooring of the stage were placed, one end on the top of each upright and the other end on the ledger board which was fastened by clamps to the outside poles, extending from pole to pole. The putlogs were nailed to the ledger board. The poles were stayed through the windows to a staging within the walls. Inside stays or ledger boards running lengthways of the wall were nailed to the uprights. The flooring completed the stage so far. When the masons standing on this stage had laid up the wall as high as they could conveniently, the process of stage building was repeated. Other uprights were placed on the ends of the putlogs next to the wall, directly over the uprights below, and were "toe-nailed” to the putlogs. Other putlogs were placed on the top of the new uprights, and extended to a ledger board. The staging was stayed to the inside stage as before, and was then ready for use. This process was repeated as often as necessary. The stagings were in fact built [200]*200by the carpenters, although occasionally a mason would help a little to expedite the work, as by putting up planks. It appears that the general plan pursued was for the carpenters to build a stage on one side of a building, while the masons were at work on another stage at some other part of the building. In this way, as a general rule, when the masons had completed their work on one stage, they would find another already prepared for them, and thus would lose no time. Generally the ends of the stage at the corners of the building were made ready and stayed first, so that the two masons who were to build up the leads at the corners could build the leads while the carpenters were completing the rest of the stage. By thus starting the leads, the wall would be ready for the other masons to work on when the whole stage was done. All the work on the building was done under the charge and supervision of the defendant’s general superintendent, Sturtevant.

On the morning of the day of the plaintiff’s injury Mr. Sturtevant directed two masons to go upon the staging in question, which was on the west side of the building, and build up the leads at the corners. Meanwhile the masons’ crew, including the plaintiff, were at work on a staging at the same level on the south side of the building. An hour later, having finished their work on the south side, they came around the corner of the building onto the staging which afterwards collapsed. They found the staging floored, the leads up, and brick and mortar on the stage, ready to be put into the wall. The brick and mortar had been placed there by the masons’ tenders. The masons had no express directions from the defendant or his superintendent to go upon the staging, but they went there in the regular course of their work, because there the wall had been made ready for them. The plaintiff made no inquiry about, or examination of, the stage to see if it was completed and properly stayed. He assumed from the appearance of the stage and the existing conditions that he was expected to go to work then upon the stage. He knew however that sometimes men went up onto a staging to put up the leads before the staging was completed. He and his fellow laborers were upon the stage laying up the wall two hours or more before the stage collapsed.

[201]*201During some part of the time the plaintiff was working upon the stage, and at the moment of the collapse, a single carpenter was at work underneath the staging, nailing on stays from the outside poles through the windows to the inside staging. The stays were nailed on close up to the ledger boards, a few inches below the planking of the upper stage. Just when this carpenter began this work does not clearly appear. But the jury were warranted in finding that he did not commence staying the stage until after the masons had gone upon it. In fact, this carpenter, who was a witness, so testified. And inasmuch as thirty-five to forty feet of the sixty foot stage still remained unstayed at the time of the accident, a strong inference arises that he had not then been at work a long time. He had not worked directly under the plaintiff, but when the stage fell he had reached a point about fifteen feet from him. The part of the stage which fell was about midway of the building.

Upon these facts, the defendant denies all responsibility. He claims, first, that he did not undertake to furnish a staging as a completed structure, on which the plaintiff was to do his work, but that he furnished the necessary materials for the stage, suitable in kind and sufficient in quantity, with which the workmen, either the masons or their fellow servants, the carpenters, or both, were to build the stagings as they liked, and upon their own responsibility ; next, that even if he had undertaken to furnish the stagings as completed structures, in this case he did not in fact furnish this stage to the plaintiff, because it was obviously not completed, and it was not intended for the masons to go upon it, until more securely stayed, and the plaintiff went upon it without direction or invitation, prematurely, before it was ready to be furnished or had been furnished in fact; and, lastly, that the plaintiff, in going upon a stage so obviously incomplete and unsafe, both assumed the risk, and was guilty of contributory negligence.

As to the first point this is to be said. It is admittedly the duty of a master to use reasonable care to furnish for his servant a reasonably safe place for him to do his work. In the matter of stagings and scaffoldings, and other like aids to construction, built during the progress of the work, the master, if he undertakes to [202]*202furnish and does furnish a reasonably safe, completed structure, has fulfilled his duty. If he undertakes to furnish such a structure, and fails to use reasonable care, and it is not made reasonably safe, he is responsible to a servant who is injured in consequence thereof unless the latter has assumed the risk, or is at fault himself. He is responsible not only for his own personal negligence, but for the negligence of the servants whom he employs to build the structure. In doing the work, they are doing his work. They are not fellow servants of others who may be employed by him to do other work in the same general undertaking. Pellerin v. International Paper Co., 96 Maine, 388; McCarthy v. Claflin, 99 Maine, 290.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Spence v. Bath Iron Works Corp.
37 A.2d 174 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1944)
Kimball v. Clark
177 A. 183 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1935)
Reed v. Central Maine Power Co.
172 A. 823 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1934)
Miller v. Dunton
126 A. 492 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1924)
Nelson v. Martinson
212 F. 912 (Eighth Circuit, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 A. 782, 107 Me. 195, 1910 Me. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-sawyer-me-1910.