Harff v. Green

67 S.W. 576, 168 Mo. 308, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 185
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 29, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 67 S.W. 576 (Harff v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harff v. Green, 67 S.W. 576, 168 Mo. 308, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 185 (Mo. 1902).

Opinion

ROBINSON, J.

— On September 17, 1892, there was in process of construction, at the comer of Ninth street and Washington avenue, in St. Louis, a certain nine-story brick building. Defendant Green was the contractor for the whole work, and Patrick McCarthy was his superintendent or foreman. Defendant Baker was the subcontractor for the doing of the brick work, and defendant Seger was the subcontractor for the doing of the carpenter work. The plaintiff was employed by defendant Seger. On the day stated the bricklayers were at work carrying up the walls of the fifth story, and the carpenters were at work laying the floors on the third story. The bricklayers had erected a scaffold five or six feet above the joists of the fifth story to stand on. This scaffold extended five or six feet out from the wall. From the scaffold, on which the bricklayers stood while working, to the elevator, which was about fifteen feet distant, there was a gangway, composed of two planks laid side by side, over which the laborers wheeled brick in wheelbarrows from the elevator to the place on the platform where the bricklayers were at work.

"When the plaintiff and William Schneider, a carpenter also employed by Seger, went to work on the morning in question, McCarthy directed them to lay the flooring on the third floor, directly under the gangway aforesaid between the elevator and the platform. They objected to working there, and [311]*311Schneider told McCarthy it was dangerous to work there because there was no covering for safety over them and the bricks were liable to fall on them and hurt them. McCarthy answered: “If you don’t want to work there you have to pick up your tools and go home, I can hire some other men.” There were a couple of boards belonging to the bricklayers lying there and McCarthy told Schneider and the plaintiff to take them and make a covering as well as they could, and they did so. The testimony showed, however, that it was not a sufficient or safe covering, and that while the carpenters were at work laying the floor on the third story, in some manner a wheelbarrow' loaded with bricks fell over or through the said gangway and some of them struck the plaintiff and'injured him, and he brought this action for ten thousand dollars damages against Green, the general contractor, Baker, the brick subcontractor, and Seger, the carpenter subcontractor.

Green and Baker answered separately, by a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. Seger made default. The testimony showed that it was the custom for the brick contractor to ask the general contractor to put up a covering for safety to keep bricks from falling and injuring the carpenters who were working on the lower floors, and that it was the custom for the general contractor to do so. It also appeared that McCarthy, the superintendent or foreman for Green, the general contractor, gave orders to any or all of the men, by whomsoever employed, as to where they should work and they were obliged to obey such orders.

Upon this showing the circuit court sustained a demurrer to the evidence as to defendants Green and Baker, on the ground that there was no contractual relation between them and the plaintiff, and that the relation of master and servant did not exist between them or either of them and the plaintiff, and that they had not violated any duty they owed to the plaintiff. The plaintiff then took a nonsuit as to all of the de[312]*312fendants, and after an unsuccessful motion to set it aside, appealed to this court.

I. The petition bases a right to recover against Baker and Green upon the ground that it was their duty to so carry on the brick work as not to create a nuisance on the premises that would injure any person lawfully upon the premises, and that they were negligent in doing the brick work, which negligence caused the injury to the plaintiff, and the petition bases a right to recover against Seger and Green upon the ground that it was their duty to furnish plaintiff a reasonably safe place in which to work and they failed to do so. The petition states that the proximate cause of the injury was the negligence of one of the servants of defendant Baker in letting bricks fall from a wheelbarrow he was wheeling across the gangway between the elevator and the platform on which the bricklayers were working.

There was no evidence introduced to show any custom or duty that required Baker to construct safety coverings to prevent bricks falling upon the carpenters or other workmen below. It is too plain to admit of serious discussion that if such a safety covering was so manifestly necessary to the safety of the carpenters as to make it negligence for the brick contractor not to construct it, the danger to the carpenters of working without such a- safety covering was so obvious and imminent as to make it contributory negligence for them to work there. Hence, if the brick contractor was negligent, the carpenters were equally negligent, and therefore there could be no recovery by any of the latter against the former.

Eor the law is well settled that one who has failed to exercise ordinary care to insure his own safety, can not recover against one who owed him only a duty of ordinary care to protect him from the effects of his negligence. [Barton v. Railroad, 52 Mo. 253; Doss v. Railroad, 59 Mo. 27; Carroll v. Trans. Co., 107 Mo. 653; O’Donnell v. Patton, 117 Mo. 13.]

[313]*313The evidence introduced by the plaintiff to establish a custom, so far as it applied to the brick contractor, only tended to show that it was his duty to call upon the general contractor to provide safety covers, and there was no evidence as to whether or not, Baker, the brick contractor, made any such call upon Green, the general contractor, and in the absence of affirmative proof that Baker did not call upon Green to do so, the presumption of law is that he did his duty, and did so call upon Green, and therefore the plaintiff failed to make out a prima facie case.

But aside from this the testimony introduced to establish such a custom was materially weakened, if not entirely nullified by the testimony of the plaintiff himself, who, in speaking of erecting safety covers, said: “It is done according to the specifications.” If this be true then the erection of such safety covers, and who shall erect them, is governed by the specifications, and there is no evidence in this ease as to what the specifications provided in that respect.

So that so far as defendant Baker is concerned the plaintiff wholly failed to make out a case upon any theory of the law.

But it is charged that defendants Green and Seger are liable because they failed to provide the plaintiff with a reasonably safe place in which to work.

There can be no doubt about the existence of a rule of law requiring the master to furnish the servant a reasonably safe place in which to do his work, and of the master’s liability to the servant if he fails to comply with this rule. [Turner v. Haar, 114 Mo. 335; Herdler v. Range Co., 136 Mo. 3; Dayharsh v. Railroad, 103 Mo. 570.]

But what is meant by a safe place, has no reference to the patent or obvious safety or unsafety of the place, because in the nature of things many kinds of labor have to be performed under conditions that are relatively unsafe and often[314]*314times dangerous. [Fugler v. Bothe, 117 Mo. 475; Steinhauser v. Spraul, 127 Mo. 541.]

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Bluebook (online)
67 S.W. 576, 168 Mo. 308, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harff-v-green-mo-1902.