Gilmartin v. Kilgore

114 S.W. 398, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 177, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 327
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 31, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 114 S.W. 398 (Gilmartin v. Kilgore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilmartin v. Kilgore, 114 S.W. 398, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 177, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 327 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

CONNER, Chief Justice.

— This appeal is from a judgment in appellee’s favor for the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars as damages for personal injuries received while in the employ of appellants. The evidence shows that appellee at the time of his injuries was working upon a scaffold erected by himself and another by the command of W. H. Gilmartin, one of the appellants, for the purpose of removing material from the walls of a building that appellants, as contractors, had. undertaken to remove. Appellee charged that the scaffold was insufficient for the labor required of him, and that appellants were guilty of negligence in failing to provide him with a safe place to work.

Appellants pleaded that appellee was an experienced laborer in the character of work he was doing, and an experienced and competent 'scaffold builder, and fully understood whatever insufficiency there was, if any, in the scaffold, and knew and fully understood the danger involved in its use, and therefore assumed the risk of the injuries of which he complained.

The vital question presented to us is the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the judgment. Ye quote the following extracts from appellee’s testimony:

“My name is Sam Kilgore; am thirty-nine years of age — forty years old the 17th of next July. I got hurt last spring. Am about six feet tall. Before I got hurt I weighed 220. At the time I got hurt I was working for Gilmartin and Tierney- — W. H. and Dan. Last spring, about the 20th or 22d of May, on the evening of the 22d, he (Gilmartin) ordered me to build a scaffold to take down some brick down here at the old drugstore that got burned out; ... he says, ‘y°u are an *179 experienced scaffold builder, I will get yoú to build it;’ ... I says, ‘I will have to have somebody to help me;’ he says, ‘Get two men to help you,’ and I got two men to help me and started to build the scaffold; I says, ‘What you going to build the scaffold for?’ He says, ‘Just to take down that brick back there- — just a light scaffold — just build a light scaffold — just a couple of men on it;’ I says, ‘All right.’ I taken a two-by-twelve and nailed that to the upright or girder that runs through the building, and then put up uprights two by twelve on the other end against the brick wall, and made it substantial on the girder below that was in the basement; that was on the inside, and I was nailing the centers and had the boys holding it, and he says ‘Two or three spikes in each one will do; don’t be there all day;’ I says, ‘All right; I will get it up as quick as I can’ — Gilmartin said that; that was his orders, standing right there until I got the scaffold done; he says, Tt is only just for to take down those brick of that wall, to keep them from falling on anybody, down to that big iron lintel;’ I says, ‘All right;’ I can’t always dictate with a man about a scaffold because I never had a scaffold fall in my life, and I have worked all over the country on scaffolds; he says, ‘Just to take that brick down;’ and I went ahead and built it like he instructed inc; we taken the brick down; I got on the scaffold and helped them take down and laid them on the joists; as soon as we got the brick down — we got them down quickly — he goes ahead and says, ‘Let’s take that lintel;’ I says, ‘The scaffold ain’t sufficient to take'dhat lintel down; that lintel weighs about twelve or fourteen hundred pounds;’ he says, ‘Well, we can take it off the wall and lay it over here;’ I says, ‘All right,’ and me and two more fellows got there and . . . We eased it down to the studding,, and he turned around after we got that , . . . He says, ‘I want that lintel up here;’ from there over there it was about fourteen feet back to the wall and the landing on the main joists of the building; .he says, ‘I want the lintel'here;’ he says, ‘The best way to get that up here is to get some plank, and let’s lay up a string of plank and drag it up here;’ ‘Well,’ I says, ‘Just as .you say; I am here under your' orders;’ but the lintel is a big bow in like a cradle —like a bellows, ( ), — and it was on that side, and we could not turn it over at the place where it was,' and he ordered it turned over; well, we turned it over, and it jarred the scaffold pretty well, and we all started to pull it.; we pulled it up to the place where we was .going te lift it and land it,' but ‘Ho,’ I. says, ‘that is as far as we can go;’ I says, ‘What can we do now?’ He says, ‘Well, just take the rope off; we can lift it up;’ I says, ‘As soon as you,put your men down here — enough men to get around this to lift it up over there — this scaffold is going to break;’ I says,.‘There is too many plank on here, and it is -not strong enough;’ he says, ‘0-,’ (speaking in his way, rashly) “it is sufficient,’ and he jumped down himself, and with four or five other men down on there, and me down there — that makes seven or eight men on the scaf fold — we all got around it, and he got around it himself, and I toted on the load next to the landing, and he says, ‘Give the word, and we will lift;’ I says, ‘I am a little feared on this scaffold, but, if we go we go, that is all; you are here with us — makes it safer, and lift quicker;’ I give the word and made a lift at this lintel on the scaffold, and we failed to lift it that time; I straightened up- and.I says, ‘Boys, you haven’t *180 done nothing; let’s lift this thing away; don’t be afeared of the scaffold; if it is going to fall it will fall; the man that is paying you is on here;’ everybody got around, and me and he both give the word at the same time, ‘Lift,’ and we never did remember coming up; it went down; just broke a two-by-twelve right half in two and went down. . . . The stringer broke half in two, right at the middle. . . . The nails did not pull out; it just snapped right half in two; had too much load right at the place; they was all right in one place, and lifting in a bunch, and the length of the plank from the other pudlock made all that weight on that, and that heavy lintel and seven or eight men, when we made the spring to lift we threw more forcible power — you know it just snapped right half in two. . . . When 1 called attention to Mr. Gil-martin that I was afraid the scaffold was not sufficient for the heavy weight, he says, ‘0, hell; it was plenty; it was good enough,’ and just jumped down himself to show it was good enough; that he would risk himself; that we ought to risk ourselves on it; and got hold of the end of the thing himself, and went down in the basement himself. Except for his orders to put that heavy lintel on the platform I would not have done it. . . . The business I generally follow is scaffolding and cement finisher, cement work, concrete, . . .”

On cross-examination appellee testified as follows:

“Gilmartin told me to build that scaffold because I was, an experienced scaffold builder;. he knew I was, because I had just finished a building, and I had worked for him off and on four or five years; 1 had built scaffolds when I worked for him. I had worked for other contractors in the last ten years — for every contractor in Fort Worth — built scaffolds for them; used to build scaffolds for Brice. I was actually an experienced scaffold builder; I knew how to build them, and how strong to build them, and all about it, I was probably just as good a scaffold builder, if not better, than Gilmartin himself; 1 was better.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W. 398, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 177, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilmartin-v-kilgore-texapp-1908.