Follansbee v. Ohse

199 N.E. 387, 293 Mass. 48, 1935 Mass. LEXIS 1305
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 199 N.E. 387 (Follansbee v. Ohse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Follansbee v. Ohse, 199 N.E. 387, 293 Mass. 48, 1935 Mass. LEXIS 1305 (Mass. 1935).

Opinion

Crosby, J.

This is an action of tort in which the plaintiff seeks to recover for personal injuries sustained by him while using a staging in painting the defendant's house, and alleged to have been caused by negligence of the defendant.

The plaintiff testified as follows: He had been a painter for nearly fifty years. He made an agreement with the defendant to paint his house for $130. It was a two and a half story wooden house with a pitched roof; the gutters were about twenty-six or twenty-eight feet above the ground and in bad condition. The plaintiff inspected the gutters: he first looked at the left side of the house and could see from the ground that the gutter at the roof was leaking and unsafe for him to use in swinging his staging from. On the same day he notified the defendant that the gutters of the house needed repairing and that he could not go on with the work until they had been fixed; the defendant replied that he would employ a carpenter and have the gutters repaired. The plaintiff and his workman, one Cummings, commenced painting the front of the house on which there were no gutters; after finishing that part they painted the back of the house. While the plaintiff was working there on a piazza, the defendant called up to him and said, “The gutters are all right now, go ahead." Before this time he had seen the defendant's carpenter working on the premises; after this conversation, he painted the left side of the house, using the gutter, which was new, to place his hooks in from which to swing the staging. After finishing the left side, he and his employee worked on the right side, first testing the gutter and finding it apparently safe. There was a bay window on the right side about two thirds back from the front of the house; the distance from the bay window to the back of the house was about fifteen or eighteen feet. When the plaintiff and his employee came to paint the portion of the right side in the rear of the bay window, they took the staging and an extension ladder there. A gutter hook is made “of iron or steel, and there is a block attached to the lower end into which the falls go; at the tip of the hook there is a cross piece, about eight or ten inches in length, which rests in the gutter when the hook is in use. Cummings went up the [50]*50extension ladder carrying a gutter hook, which he inserted into the gutter; then the plaintiff put a board between the ends of the falls and jumped up and down on it for the purpose of testing the gutter to determine whether it was strong enough to support the staging. Cummings remained on the ladder near where the hook had been placed to observe the gutter when the board was jumped upon, and reported that the gutter seemed all right. He put another hook in the gutter and made the same test, and told the plaintiff that the gutter appeared to be all right. Cummings was an experienced painter. The plaintiff and Cummings went upon the staging and commenced painting. Cummings took a step or two for the purpose of speaking to him and then, without warning, the right hand side of the staging fell down and the plaintiff fell to the ground and was seriously injured. The plaintiff did not use a tie line on this job; he testified that there was nothing on the roof that he knew of to which a tie line could be secured. He did not say that everything was all right before the carpenter left the job; he did not see the gutter on the right side of the building until he went to that side for the purpose of painting it; so far as he could tell from looking at it from the ground, it was all right; he relied on what the defendant told him about the gutters being all right, and on the test he and Cummings made by jumping on the falls and inspecting the gutter.

The plaintiff’s employee Cummings testified that while he and the plaintiff were working on the rear of the house he saw the defendant come to a point below the piazza where they were working and heard the defendant say to the plaintiff: “The gutters are all right now, go ahead”; that after finishing the rear of the house he and the plaintiff painted the left hand side of it, swinging the staging on hooks inserted in the gutter; that the gutter was new; that after painting that side of the house they commenced the right side; that he put the hooks in the gutter and watched it while the plaintiff jumped on the falls; that the gutter seemed all right; that after he had been working on that side about half an hour the gutter above the plaintiff gave way and the right end of the staging fell to the ground taking the [51]*51plaintiff with it; that the piece of the gutter which fell was six or eight feet long; that the wood in the trough was cracked and blackened; that the wood inside was rotten; that the nails had broken off and had not pulled out; that the nails were badly rusted and the nail holes were enlarged; that he thought it was right for them to swing the staging from the gutter. There was other evidence presented by the plaintiff tending to show that the gutter on the right hand side of the house was in a decayed condition; that the piece that fell to the ground was painted and looked all right when in place, but that the inside of it was very rotten.

It could have been found by the jury from the testimony of the plaintiff that when he went to the defendant’s house for the purpose of painting it he inspected the gutters, and found they were in bad condition, and that on the same day he notified the defendant that he could not go on with the work until they were repaired; that the defendant replied that he would employ a carpenter, and have the gutters repaired. Thereafter the defendant employed a carpenter who repaired one of the gutters, but did not make any repairs upon the gutter on the right side of the house. Later, and while the plaintiff was painting at the back of the house, the defendant said to him, “The gutters are all right now, go ahead.” Before this time the plaintiff had seen the defendant’s carpenter working on the premises. After the plaintiff and his employee had finished painting the left side of the house, they tested the gutter on the right side, and finding it apparently safe they suspended the staging from it. Soon after the plaintiff and his assistant began painting on this side the staging fell, owing to the decayed condition of the gutter, and the plaintiff was seriously injured.

The plaintiff was the contractor; he used a “swinging staging.” It belonged to him, and was put up by him, and the defendant had nothing to do with it and no responsibility for it. With respect to a “swinging staging” there are printed regulations adopted and in force under' G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 149, §§ 6, 7. The important provision is in these words: “Supporting devices shall be secured to some stable [52]*52part of the building or structure. When they are attached to or supported by the gutters, they shall be secured independently by a tie-line.” That is imperative and unequivocal. It makes no exceptions. It is plainly authorized by the statute. It is provided by § 13 of said c. 149 that “No person shall violate any reasonable rule, regulation, order or requirement made by the department under section six . . . .” It is provided by § 180 of the same chapter that “Whoever violates a provision of this chapter for which no specific penalty is provided shall be punished by a fine of not more than one hundred dollars.” It seems plain on the evidence that the plaintiff was violating this regulation and thus committing a crime.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 N.E. 387, 293 Mass. 48, 1935 Mass. LEXIS 1305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/follansbee-v-ohse-mass-1935.