Independent Five & Ten Cent Stores v. Heller

127 N.E. 439, 189 Ind. 554, 1920 Ind. LEXIS 55
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1920
DocketNo. 23,214
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 127 N.E. 439 (Independent Five & Ten Cent Stores v. Heller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Independent Five & Ten Cent Stores v. Heller, 127 N.E. 439, 189 Ind. 554, 1920 Ind. LEXIS 55 (Ind. 1920).

Opinion

Harvey, J.

Appellee was, at the time of the happenings hereinafter described, the lessee and in possession of building No. 116, South Michigan street, South Bend, Indiana, and of all floors of the adjoining building, No. 114, above 'the first. Appellant was the lessee of the first floor and basement of No; 114 for use.in connection with appellant’s business conducted in the adjoining building, No. 112, of which appellant was also the lessee. A party wall between buildings Nos. 112 and 114 was a part of each of said last-named buildings, and was depended upon by eách of said parties for support of his leased portion thereof.

Appellant, defendant below, desired to remove said partition, or party wall, between said first floor rooms, in order that it might use the first floors of Nos. 112 and 114 as one salesroom, and desired to cut a door in the foundation wall supporting said party wall for a passageway to and from the basement of No. 114.

With the consent of defendant’s lessor defendant so did, substituting on the first floor iron columns or posts for the wall removed. When said alterations were practically completed and defendant was moving a portion of its stock of goods into the first floor and basement of No. 114, said partition wall gave way, and the floors of the respective parties supported thereby and the goods of each on said floors were dropped toward, or into, said-basement.

[557]*557The said party wall belonged to plaintiff as lessee so far as support of his leased upper floors of said building was needed; he was in peaceable and lawful possession thereof; and any disturbance thereof to his injury was, so far 'as appears, unauthorized and wrongful. Defendants had like interest and rights in said party wall, and had the consent of the respective lessors to make therein the said alterations. Its right to make such alterations did- not, however, permit it to disturb plaintiff’s possession or enjoyment of his leased portion of said wall, or its support.

1. The foregoing facts are shown by the record to be undisputed. From these facts it follows that, when defendant undertook to so change said wall, defendant did so at his own risk, and, if injury to plaintiff’s rights and possession, and to his property on the upper floors, proximately resulted therefrom, defendant was chargeable therewith. This is the law, though defendant may have exercised due care in so doing. Cartwright v. Adair (1901), 27 Ind. App. 293, 301, 61 N. E. 240; Payne v. Moore (1903), 31 Ind. App. 360, 66 N. E. 483, 67 N. E. 1005; Briggs v. Klosse (1892), 5 Ind. 129, 31 N. E. 208, 51 Am. St. 238.

Whether defendant’s conduct in changing said wall caused the same to collapse, or whether said wall collapsed because of some fact not connected with defendant’s work, was a disputed question.

Defendant’s first paragraph of answer was a general denial. Upon the issue thus made, as well as the issue made upon the second paragraph, which will be noted later, the cause was tried by a jury,- and a general verdict for the plaintiff was found, fixing the amount of plaintiff’s damages; and this verdict must [558]*558be sustained unless during the progress of the trial some harmful error was committed by the court tending to produce said result.

2. Appellant by its second paragraph of answer set up at length facts by which appellant endeavored to show that said work for appellant upon said wall was done after due care in the selection of an architect to prepare plans and specifications, and after due care in the selection of a contractor to perform said work, and under a contract which constituted the latter an “independent contractor,” and that therefore appellant was not responsible for the results, even .though said results were produced by such contractor’s negligence.

The much greater proportion of all the questions which appellant presents here are disposed of if it be found that the doctrine of “independent contractor” does not apply under such circumstances. Having determined the nature of appellee’s rights in said wall, and having determined that appellant under the undisputed facts had no right to disturb appellee’s said possession to his injury, and that he assumed the risk of such disturbance, and the jury having determined that appellant caused, by its work, said wall to collapse, it is immaterial whether appellant used due' care in the prosecution of said work; and it must follow that appellant could not lessen its responsibility by employing a third person as an independent contractor to do said work. Sessengut, Admx., v. Posey (1879), 67 Ind. 408, 23 Am; Rep. 98. See, also, 14 R. C. L. §§24, 26, 30, 35, subject, “Independent Con-. tractor.”

Proof of the matters set up in said second paragraph of answer does not constitute a defense.

[559]*559Therefore, all questions depending upon the sufficiency of the facts alleged in said answer presenting the defense of independent contractor are determined against the defendant. This includes (1) the overruling of defendant’s motion at the close of the evidence that the court direct a verdict in favor of defendant; and (2) the overruling of defendant’s motion for a judgment on the answers to interrogatories, notwithstanding the general verdict, and (3) the giving of instruction No. 8.

The foregoing observations have ignored the allegations in the complaint that said work was negligently done; but defendant earnestly insists that the issues were made and tried solely upon the theory that it was necessary for plaintiff to show that said work was negligently done, and that defendant was called upon to meet said theory only; and that therefore the doctrine of “independent contractor’.’ was in issue and was tried; and that it is unfair now to allow plaintiff, as defendant alleges plaintiff has done pending this appeal, to assert a wholly different theory, to wit, that defendant was in fact a trespasser on plaintiff’s rights, and that a trespasser cannot protect himself by employing an independent contractor to commit the trespass.

It is undoubtedly true that the complaint specifically and repeatedly charges that said work was negligently done by defendant, and it is likewise true that upon the trial of the cause much time was spent by .defendant in an endeavor to show that the work was done with due care, and by plaintiff to show that it was negligently done.

[560]*5603. [559]*559Defendant asserts that plaintiff planted plaintiff’s ease on the theory that defendant was not liable un[560]*560less defendant’s negligence caused the collapse. In other words, that defendant had a right to cut the wall without being responsible for results, unless it appeared that defendant negligently cut the wall, and that therefore the negligence of an independent contractor was not chargeable to the defendant.

But this does not necessarily follow, as the fundamental and respective relationships of the parties to these properties are recited in the complaint, and were such that defendant could not shift from himself the results of an invasion of another’s property rights to their injury, and then defend by showing that the negligence, if any, which caused the fall was that of a third person who had been selected by the defendant to enter plaintiff’s peaceable possession and do this dangerous work.

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Bluebook (online)
127 N.E. 439, 189 Ind. 554, 1920 Ind. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/independent-five-ten-cent-stores-v-heller-ind-1920.