Gee v. Egbert

679 P.2d 1194, 209 Mont. 1
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1984
Docket83-123
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 679 P.2d 1194 (Gee v. Egbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gee v. Egbert, 679 P.2d 1194, 209 Mont. 1 (Mo. 1984).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Appeal by the plaintiff, Conrad Gee, from a judgment against him based on jury verdicts entered in the District Court, Eighteenth Judicial District, Gallatin County. This case was a “third party” action incident to a work related injury and in part was the subject of a prior opinion in Gee v. Cartwheel Restaurant (Mont. 1982), [197 Mont. 335,] 642 P.2d 1070, 39 St.Rep. 597.

Gee sought to recover damages based on strict liability in tort, on negligence, and on breach of warranty. Gee was in *6 jured when he attempted to remove a chefs jacket which had become lodged between the floor of a dumbwaiter and the landing sill of the upper floor of the Cartwheel Restaurant. After unsuccessfully attempting to dislodge the jacket from outside the dumbwaiter, Gee entered the dumbwaiter and pulled on the jacket. Suddenly, the dumbwaiter broke loose and descended. Plaintiffs arm was caught between the frame work of the dumbwaiter car and the dumbwaiter shaft.

In late 1970 and early 1971, Larry Busch hired Everett Egbert to construct a 12-sided building which would later become the Cartwheel Inn-Restaurant, at the Four Corners near Bozeman. The plan for the 12-sided building was devised by Busch and Egbert and reduced to a drawing from which the building was built. Egbert consulted with an engineer for assistance with the structural components, and with mechanical, plumbing and electrical experts for their respective installations. Busch contracted with Egbert because previously Egbert had built a house for him and had done some other work, and Busch had relied on Egbert’s reputation as a builder.

During the course of construction, either Busch or Egbert decided that installation of a dumbwaiter in the building would be useful. Neither remembered whose idea it was. Busch had no specific requirements for the dumbwaiter, except for its location in the building, and its general size and weight requirements, dictated by its proposed use in hauling carts of dishes and a thermidor heating cart.

Egbert contacted Midwest Welding for assistance in building the dumbwaiter car; Midwest in turn contacted Yellowstone Hydraulics. Ultimately, Egbert built the shaft for the dumbwaiter in the building, Midwest fabricated a platform or dumbwaiter car, Yellowstone Hydraulics supplied the hoist and motor mechanism, Midwest Welding installed the system, and Matzinger Electric connected the electrical controls. Egbert devised a door to open and close with the dumbwaiter.

*7 On completion of the Cartwheel Restaurant, Busch operated it from March, 1971 until the fall of 1974. He leased it, repossessed it, and leased it again. He sold it outright to one Warburton, in February, 1976.

Gee had been employed at the Cartwheel Restaurant for about a year when the accident occurred. In that period of time he worked as a dishwasher and did odd jobs. Part of his duties included unloading from the dumbwaiter in the basement of the premises, materials and produce that had been loaded on the dumbwaiter by truck drivers. He testified that he had never ridden in the dumbwaiter. It was operated by pushing buttons which raised or lowered it from floor to floor. We have already described the incident which brought about Gee’s injuries on July 19, 1980.

After the jury verdict, plaintiff made post-trial motions which were by the court denied. This appeal ensues.

I.

Peremptory Challenges

The first issue raised by Gee is whether the District Court erred in allowing each defendant four peremptory challenges.

The number of peremptory challenges to be granted to each party was a subject discussed at the pre-trial conference. The court queried counsel for the defendants as to whether they were antagonistic toward each other in their positions in the case. Two of defendants’ counsel indicated that there was antagonism between all of them in that each was pointing a finger at one or others of the defendants as responsible for the injuries to the plaintiff. All of the defendants were independent or independent contractors and each would claim in the law suit that not it or he but those of the other defendants were responsible. Counsel for plaintiff at that time indicated first that the “antagonism question does bother me . . . and I don’t think it’s clear that they’re all that antagonistic. They are all claiming no defect, no negligence, we aren’t responsible, but there’s not *8 the antagonism that we had in the Kuhnke case ...” However, at the end of the colloquies between the court and defendants’ counsel the plaintiff’s attorney told the court “I’ll withdraw my comment after hearing from counsel.” Thereupon the District Court made its ruling that it would grant each party to the action four peremptory challenges to the selection of the jury. No specific objection was made by plaintiff’s counsel at that time.

The cause came on for jury trial, prospective jurors were examined on voir dire by all of counsel, and thereafter the parties exercised their peremptory challenges by denoting the same on a form provided by the Clerk of the District Court. The form indicates that the plaintiff and each of the parties defendant exercised all of their four peremptory challenges. However, there is nothing on the record which would indicate that plaintiff made any further objection, requested further peremptory challenges, or objected to the exercise by all of the parties defendant of some twenty (20) peremptory challenges by them.

On appeal, Gee’s counsel complains that the District Court erred in granting the number of challenges, apparently as inherent error, because no contention is made in the briefs or in the record that Gee was prevented through the grant of the peremptory challenges from getting a fair jury to try his case, unless we are to consider the adverse special verdicts against Gee as an indication of prejudice. In' other words, from all that appears of record, the cause was fairly and fully tried by the jury selected after the exercise of the peremptory challenges.

Essentially we summed up the law with respect to the granting of extra peremptory challenges in Adams v. Cheney (Mont. 1983), [203 Mont. 187,] 661 P.2d 434, 442, 40 St.Rep. 383, 391. Succinctly, Section 25-7-224, MCA, entitles each party to four peremptory challenges. In Lauman v. Lee (Mont. 1981), 626 P.2d 830, 38 St.Rep. 499, this Court approved the granting of separate peremptory challenges to co-defendants who occupy hostile positions to *9 ward each other. We held however in Leary v. Kelly Pipe Company (1976), 169 Mont. 511, 549 P.2d 813, and in Ashley v. Safeway Stores, Inc. (1935), 100 Mont. 312, 47 P.2d 53

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Bluebook (online)
679 P.2d 1194, 209 Mont. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gee-v-egbert-mont-1984.