Fore v. . Geary

131 S.E. 387, 191 N.C. 90, 1926 N.C. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 27, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 131 S.E. 387 (Fore v. . Geary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fore v. . Geary, 131 S.E. 387, 191 N.C. 90, 1926 N.C. LEXIS 12 (N.C. 1926).

Opinion

Action to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by negligence of defendants. From judgment as in case of nonsuit, rendered at close of plaintiff's evidence, upon motion of defendants, plaintiff appealed. On ______ November, 1924, plaintiff was at work, as a stonemason, on a building located near Black Mountain, North Carolina, then in process of construction by defendant, J. M. Geary, as contractor for defendant, F. S. Terry, as owner. He was 53 years of age, and had been a stonemason for twenty-five years. He had been at work on this building about two months. It was a large building, and was to be used as a residence by defendant, F. S. Terry. The outside walls were of *Page 91 stone. On said day carpenters were at work inside the building; there was quite a number of men working there, carpenters, stonemasons and others. The roof had not been completed. The building was in process of construction, carpenters, stonemasons and others all being at work at the same time upon the building.

Plaintiff, as a witness in his own behalf, testified as follows: "On the day of the accident, I was working in one of the rooms — had been working there about half an hour when I was injured. Mr. Cordell was foreman of the stone work and put me to work there; he was just off the room. He called me and told me to take my tools and build up a place in that room; he could see the place where he told me to work, for it was open. At that time the carpenters were at work above the place where I was told to go to work; there were two of them. The foreman was in a position to see the carpenters when he told me to go there to work. They had torn out a hole for a pipe to go through — a tap for a sewer, or some kind of pipe. They made the hole bigger. The ceiling was constructed of metal beams; I believe the beams started at sixteen feet and ran down; they ran kind of corner-ways across the corner of the house and were of different lengths. At the place where I was filling in the hole in the wall, the beams were something like 12 or 14 feet long. I had nothing to do with the metal beams at all. I had nothing to do with the work of these carpenters.

"A beam went over the place where the stone was torn out, and I was sent in there to build up the wall. I commenced at the floor and was building up that hole inside the wall. Several beams had been set at or about the place where I was working, and the carpenters had gotten to that place and missed one. I lacked about six feet of having this cut-out place built up where the beam could be laid. The ceiling was about nine feet high and I was squatting down hammering stone at the time I was hurt. I was on a little scaffold about three feet high and laid some stone up and got up on top of the scaffold and while I was in that position one of those metal beams fell down on me; it struck me on the back of my head, and slipped down and caught me on my shoulders — hit me on the shoulders and head; it addled me for a little bit, and then after I came to I went on to work that evening. I went to Mr. Cordell and told him I had got hurt. I went back after a while and worked the rest of the evening. From the time I received the injury I hurt in my shoulders and head and all down my side. It lasted three months. I lost about three months. I could not work on a high scaffold. I had spells with my head and had to quit driving my car because I would have dizzy spells.

"I worked under those men because the foreman sent me there. The man and the beam both fell on me; at the time, I was hunkered down *Page 92 with my eyes on the stone, away from the beam; the man was on the beam when it struck me; he was up there doing something. I did not see what made the beam fall."

Mr. Hemphill, a witness for plaintiff, testified: "I am a carpenter. I was working on the building being erected for Mr. Terry near Black Mountain by Mr. Geary at the time plaintiff, Mr. Fore, was injured. I was placing the beams at the time — metal beams. Mr. Kerlee was working with me. The long beams had all been set up to this place, and we could not set the next beam until somebody filled in the space made by the hole in the wall. We jumped over the space where Mr. Fore was working. The last beam we set was about 22 inches from the opening where he was working; the beams were 22 inches apart. After we set the beams we would nail wood strips across them to take care of the floor — to nail the floor to — and when we would set them the distance they were supposed to be, we would nail a strip to hold them in place until the masons came along and built the wall up. We did not nail the beams right around Mr. Fore with strips. We were fixing to nail them, and in some way this one turned; I don't know what was the cause of it. I looked afterwards but could not determine. It had been setting on a small foundation, a stone in the wall kind of rounded, and this stone turned with the weight of the beam, and I fell with it; I don't know whether or not it was loose; anyway it tripped me and I fell. I was going there to fasten it down and I caught on the other beam. Probably caught this one with my left hand. I was working under Mr. Lyman, the foreman of the carpenters. I had no connection with Mr. Cordell, the foreman of the stonemasons. I don't remember whether I stood on the beam or not; but I know I had picked up a piece of timber to nail those strips across. I was at work in connection with my employment on the building.

"I was going across the place there to nail the beam down. It had been put there by one of the carpenters. There was nothing wrong with the beam that I know of. It was good daylight. I noticed Mr. Fore at work on the scaffold; he could see me, but I went ahead with my work and never observed what other men were doing."

Plaintiff alleges in his complaint that he was injured by the negligence of defendants, his employers, in that they failed to exercise due care to provide for him a reasonably safe place to work. He contends that the place at which he was directed to work by his foreman was unsafe, because, at the time he was directed to go there, and while he was at work, carpenters, employed by defendants, were engaged in fastening down metal beams, which they had placed in the construction of the ceiling of the room in which plaintiff was at work; that these carpenters were permitted to continue and did continue to work on said beams while plaintiff *Page 93 was at work beneath them; that these beams were not securely fastened, and that one of them turned and fell upon him, thus injuring him. Defendant's foreman, under whose direction and supervision he was required to work, was present and knew the conditions under which plaintiff was working, when he was injured. There is no allegation or contention by plaintiff that the beam fell upon him because of any negligence of the carpenters, or because the method by which they were doing their work was unsafe or dangerous. He contends that the proximate cause of his injury was the negligence of defendants consisting in their failure to perform their duty to him, as their employee, to wit, to exercise due care to provide for him, while at work, a reasonably safe place.

The court was of opinion that the evidence offered by plaintiff was not sufficient to sustain his allegations or to support his contentions, and therefore allowed defendants' motion, made at the close of plaintiff's evidence for judgment as in case of nonsuit. C.S., 567. In this, plaintiff contends that there was error. His only assignment of error, upon his appeal to this Court, presents this contention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 S.E. 387, 191 N.C. 90, 1926 N.C. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fore-v-geary-nc-1926.