Fanjoy v. Seales

29 Cal. 243
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 29 Cal. 243 (Fanjoy v. Seales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fanjoy v. Seales, 29 Cal. 243 (Cal. 1865).

Opinion

By the Court, Currey, J.

This is an action on the case for damages consequent on injuries received by plaintiff through or by means of alleged negligence on the part of the defendant. The cause was tried before a jury, who rendered a verdict in plaintiff’s favor for two thousand and five hundred dollars, on which judgment was entered. A new trial was granted on the defendant’s application, and the plaintiff has appealed.

The case discloses that the defendant, the owner of a brick house in Sail Francisco, eleven feet front and two stories high, employed one Barry by contract to paint it. The plaintiff, a painter by trade, was employed, with others, by Barry, to perform the work of painting the house. These workmen of Barry, for the purpose of enabling themselves to do the work, suspended to the cornice of the house a staging or scaffolding. After the work was done, while in the act of taking down the scaffolding, the plaintiff stood upon the cornice, when the front wall to which it was attached broke away below the cornice. The cornice and a portion of the wall, and the plaintiff with the same, fell to the sidewalk, a distance of about thirty feet, by which his right arm was broken, besides which he suffered other serious bodily injuries, in consequence of which he was confined to his bed for several months and lost [247]*247his arm by necessary amputation. The plaintiff alleged in his complaint that the upper part of the front wall of the house and the cornice thereto attached were defectively and insufficiently constructed, and was on the part of the defendant wrongfully and negligently permitted so to be and remain while the house was being painted and when the plaintiff sustained the injuries mentioned. He also alleged that the fall of the wall and cornice and the injuries received by him were without fault or want of care on his part. The defendant by his answer traversed each and every allegation of the complaint, and for an affirmative defense alleged that he was not a mechanic ; that he had the house and cornice constructed by master mechanics without sujaervision or direction on his part, except that the same were to be constructed in a substantial and workmanlike manner, and that any injury the plaintiff may have received by the fall or otherwise, was not from any fault, knowledge or negligence on the part of the defendant.

It was proved that the accident happened as before stated, and that by the fall the plaintiff wras severely injured and was obliged to suffer the amputation of his right arm near the shoulder, and that as a consequence thereof he incurred a liability of three thousand dollars for medical and surgical service, of which he bad paid about one hundred dollars.

On the part of the plaintiff the evidence tended to show that the house had been finished by the mechanics who built! it, and accepted from them by the defendant about two months before the contract for painting it was made. That the cor-] nice w?as not fastened to the front wall of the house in the] usual manner or in a safe, proper or secure manner, in point of fact. That the fastening of the cornice was so concealed» from view that it could not be seen, and that the plaintiff] could not have ascertained the want of a proper fastening of the cornice without tearing down the wall. That painters usually go upon the cornice of such a house as the one in question ip painting the house, and use the wall and cornice in the same manner as did the plaintiff in this instance, and that there was no want of care on his part and the part of [248]*248those engaged in the work with him in going upon the cornice, necessary to avoid the accident which occurred. That the defendant was about the building while it was being constructed and while Barry and his workmen,, including the plaintiff were painting it, and saw how they were using the wall and cornice, and made no objection and gave no notice that the cornice was not of the usual strength of cornices, and that the same could not be used as was customary in such cases.

It was in evidence that the defendant was not a mechanic. On his part testimony was given tending to prove that the mason work of the house was done' for him by contract, in writing, which contract was produced in evidence. That the contractors named in the writing, and who did the work, were experienced master masons, and that the defendant did not superintend or direct them in the execution of the work. That while the walls of the house were going up, the cornice, which was made of wood, was put in the wall by a competent carpenter, who was employed by the defendant by the day to perform that and other work, and who made and put up the cornice without any direction from the defendant as to the manner in which the work should be done. Two of the defendant’s witnesses testified that cornices are intended for ornamental purposes, and that in their opinions the cornice in question was fastened sufficiently and was of sufficient strength *ror all practical purposes for which a cornice is intended.

If any one of the grounds assigned by the defendant for a new trial was well taken the order made granting it must be allowed to stand. The defendant specified several grounds as error, on account of which he asked the Court to vacate the verdict and grant a new trial, 'f The first of these wastoat the Court erred in admitting certain evidence on the question of special damages, which we do not now propose to consider. The second, stated in general terms, was that upon the facts and circumstances set forth in the statement, as proved or admitted on the trial, and concerning which there seems tó be no dispute, the verdict should have been for the defendant [249]*249instead of the plaintiff. We shall consider the case upon the second ground of error thus assigned, and on which the motion was granted.

The theory upon which the plaintiff proceeded was that the defendant was liable to him for the injury which he suffered, on the ground that the upper part of the front wall of the house and the cornice and its fastenings were so negligently and defectively constructed as to be insufficient and inadequate for the support of the painter’s staging and the additional weight of such person or persons as were thereon while the house was being painted, and that the same were allowed so to be and remain when the accident described befel the plaintiff; and that it mattered not that the building was constructed by master mechanics without any directions frpm the defendant as te the work, except that it should be well and substantially done, or that he was ignorant, in fact, of the infirm and insufficient condition of the wall and cornice when the accident.occurred.

The house was accepted by the defendant from the contractors some time before it was painted, and if at that time or afterward an injury, by reason of its defective construction, happened to any one for which an action might be maintained, the defendant is the person wl¡o would be answerable; for being the owner and having the control 'of the property, the| law imposes on him the duty of maintaining it in such a con-1 dition as to occasion no injury to others who are withouCTi fault. In such case the doctrine of respondeat superior can have no application, because the relation of superior and subordinate did not exist when the accident happened. If the house^pp insufficiently built the defendant was not bound to accept it from those who had contracted to build it4j£a substajfljit'and workmanlike manner.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Cal. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fanjoy-v-seales-cal-1865.