Hilleary v. Bromley

64 N.E.2d 832, 146 Ohio St. 212, 146 Ohio St. (N.S.) 212, 32 Ohio Op. 188, 1946 Ohio LEXIS 310
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1946
Docket30383
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 64 N.E.2d 832 (Hilleary v. Bromley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hilleary v. Bromley, 64 N.E.2d 832, 146 Ohio St. 212, 146 Ohio St. (N.S.) 212, 32 Ohio Op. 188, 1946 Ohio LEXIS 310 (Ohio 1946).

Opinion

Hart, J.

The sole question presented is whether plaintiff adduced evidence sufficient to entitle him to have his case submitted to the jury.

The plaintiff complains that the defendants, with knowledge of the purpose for which the ladders were to be used, and with knowledge that a defective ladder furnished for such purpose would be an instrumentality of great hazard and danger to the plaintiff, nevertheless furnished a defective ladder which they, in the exercise of reasonable care, should have known was defective and unsuitable for the purpose for which it was intended; that the negligence of the defendants in this regard was the proximate cause of his injury; and that the defendants in so furnishing such ladder violated a specific safety requirement adopted by the state of Ohio relative to ladders and scaffolds..

It is axiomatic that tort liability is predicated upon the violation of a duty growing out of a legal relationship voluntarily assumed by the tort-feasor with another, or a duty arising by operation of law because of the situation of the parties. The defendants were the bailors and the plaintiff the bailee of the ladder in question. The legal rights and duties arising out of bailment are founded upon the contemplation of benefit accruing to one party or the other, or to both. Here, the defendants, as bailors, furnished the ladder to assist the bailee, the plaintiff, in performing a contract in which the bailors were interested. It was a bailment for mutual benefit. The extent of the duty of a bailor as to defects in the property, which he should recog *216 nize as likely to injure others, has its basis in the derivation of benefit to himself. Where the bailor has no beneficial interest in the bailment, it may be unreasonable to impose upon him a duty to put the subject matter of the bailment in usable condition unless it is an inherently dangerous instrumentality. Such an obligation would unduly restrict the transfer of property, causing persons to refrain from lending chattels to another for the sole benefit of the latter. However, where both the bailor and the bailee are benefited by , the transaction, the situation is otherwise. It then becomes the bailor’s duty to make the chattel; which is the subject of bailment, safe for its intended purpose, or to inform the bailee of any unsafe condition in the chattel which it was the duty of the bailor, in the exercise of ordinary care, to discover. Restatement of Torts, 1039, Section 388 and 1064, Section 392; 78 University of Pennsylvania Law Review, 413.

Where ■ a bailor is benefited by the- bailment, as in this case, it is held that his duty should be of a higher nature than in the case of a bailment which benefits solely the bailee. Gagnon v. Dana, 69 N. H., 264, 39 A., 982; In re Application by Phillips, Supt. of Ins., 250 N. Y., 410, 417, 165 N. E., 829, 832. Such bailor is under obligation to use reasonable effort to anticipate danger by discovering defects which may exist in the chattel bailed. See Blakemore v. Bristol & Exeter Ry. Co. (1858), 8 E. & B., 1035; Coughlin v. Gillison (1899), 1 Q. B., 145.

The duty of a supplier of chattels involves a risk similar to that which arises from the duty of an occupier of land to persons coming upon his premises for purposes mutually beneficial. In this case, the defendants employed the plaintiff to go upon and place siding upon a building to fulfill their obligation to the owner of that building. The situation of the parties was not different from what it would have been if the cle *217 fendants had employed the plaintiff to perform the same service upon their own premises. The plaintiff clearly stood in the relationship to the defendants in the prosecution of this work as an invitee and not as a stranger or licensee in the use of the ladder in question. The plaintiff, as such invitee, was entitled to be protected from unreasonable risks resulting from the condition or disrepair of the ladder or its unfitness or inadequacy for the purpose for which it was supplied. 1 Thompson, Commentaries on Law of Negligence (2 Ed.), 619, Section 679; Mayhew v. Sullivan Mining Co., 76 Me., 100; Hozian, an Infant, v. Crucible Steel Casting Co., 132 Ohio St., 453, 9 N. E. (2d), 143, 112 A. L. R., 333; American Steel & Wire Co. v. Sieraski, 119 F. (2d), 709.

It is true that the plaintiff in this case was an independent contractor and not an employee of the defendants. The general rule is that a contractor cannot recover damages from his employer for injuries which the former may sustain in the performance of his contract, and this rule is predicated upon the fact that the contractor has control and is required, as every principal is, to provide for his own safety and protection. If the employer, however, retains the right of control or agrees to furnish the instrumentalities of the work to the contractor to be used by him in the prosecution of the work and the latter is injured by reason of their being defective, a different rule obtains. 27 American Jurisprudence, 508, Section 30.

The rule applicable to the case at bar is stated in 2 Restatement of Torts, 1064, Section 392, as follows:

‘ ‘ One who supplies to another, directly or through a third person, a chattel to be used for the supplier’s •business purposes is subject to liability to those for whose use the chattel is supplied, or to those whom he should expect to be in the vicinity of its probable use, for bodily harm caused by the use of the chattel in the *218 manner for which and by persons for whose use the chattel is supplied: (a) If the supplier has failed to exercise reasonable care to .make the chattel safe for the use for which it is supplied, or (b) if the supplier’s failure to give to those whom he should expect to use the chattel the information required by the rule stated in Section 388 [dangerous condition of the chattel or facts which make it likely to be so] is due to his failure to exercise reasonable care to discover its dangerous character or condition.”

Under Comment b, the Restatement says:

“* * * Section 392 states the rule under which a peculiar liability is imposed upon one supplying chattels for another’s use because of the fact that the use is one in which the supplier has a business interest. A person so supplying goods is required not only to give warning of dangers which he knows are involved in the use of the article, or which, from facts within his knowledge, he knows are likely to be so involved, but also to subject the article to such an inspection as the danger of using it in a defective condition makes it reasonable to require of him. The additional duty of inspection thrown upon the person so supplying chattels for a use in which he has a business interest, as compared with the absence of any such duty when he has no business interest in the use for which the chattel is supplied, is analogous to the duty of inspection imposed upon one who permits another to come upon his land for his business purpose and the absence of such duty where the permission is granted for any other reason.” See Harper on Torts, 239, Section 105.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 N.E.2d 832, 146 Ohio St. 212, 146 Ohio St. (N.S.) 212, 32 Ohio Op. 188, 1946 Ohio LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hilleary-v-bromley-ohio-1946.