Kawneer Manufacturing Co. v. Kalter

118 N.E. 561, 187 Ind. 99, 1918 Ind. LEXIS 11
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1918
DocketNo. 23,279
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 118 N.E. 561 (Kawneer Manufacturing Co. v. Kalter) 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
Kawneer Manufacturing Co. v. Kalter, 118 N.E. 561, 187 Ind. 99, 1918 Ind. LEXIS 11 (Ind. 1918).

Opinion

MYERS, J.

— Appellant prosecutes this appeal'from a judgment rendered against it'for damages recovered by appellee on account of its alleged negligence in constructing a scaffold upon which appellee was working at the time of the accident. The overruling of appel[101]*101lant’s motion for a new trial is the only error assigned and not waived.

1. We shall consider the questions in the order presented by appellant. (1) Were the damages excessive? This court has repeatedly ruled that the claim of excessive damages cannot be sustained unless the amount is so large that it cannot be explained on any reasonable hypothesis other than prejudice, passion, partiality, corruption or that some improper element was taken into account. City of Indianapolis v. Stokes (1914), 182 Ind. 31, 35, 105 N. E. 477; New York, etc., R. Co. v. Shields (1916), 185 Ind. 704, 112 N. E. 762, 764; Fox v. Barekman (1912), 178 Ind. 572, 579, 99 N. E. 989; Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Roth (1915), 59 Ind. App. 161, 168, 107 N. E. 689, 108 N. E. 971.

2. There was evidence to the effect that appellant, at the time of his injury, was sixty-four years old, and had a life expectancy of twelve years. He was a brick mason and plasterer by trade and was earning $5 per day. Since his injury, he cannot plaster overhead, nor raise his arm above his shoulder without intense pain. He has pain in the shoulder continuously. His suffering was diagnosed by physicians as caused by production of new tissue, and adhesions about the shoulder joint, “around the end of the bones and about the ligaments and tendons that constitute the shoulder joint”. The opinion of a physician from an X-ray examination was “that there was probably a little chronic productive inferior process going on all about this diseased shoulder joint;” that the condition was brought about by an injury and “probably will be permanent.” We shall not take space to collect other evidence on this subject, but it is sufficient to say that if the jury believed the evidence most favorable to appellee, to the exclusion of other evidence we might quote —and it must have done so — then, under the well-settled [102]*102rules prohibiting this court from passing on the weight of the evidence, we are powerless to substitute our views for that of the jury on the question of appellee’s compensation.

(2) Does the evidence sustain the verdict? On this question appellant, in effect, takes the position that with appellee’s experience of forty-six years in the work he was doing, if the scaffold was so unsafe, shaky, out of plumb and wabbly, as claimed by the witnesses for appellee, some of whom having so testified from observation, its unsafe condition must have been known to appellee, or at least he could have known it by the'exercise of ordinary care.. Upon this assumption of appellee’s case, appellant has presented an ingenious and persuasive argument, but when analyzed it is based upon open and obvious defects, and the presumption of law — it being conceded that appellee possessed all his senses— that he saw what he could have seen had he looked, citing Baxter v. Lusher (1902), 159 Ind. 881, 385, 65 N. E. 211.

The complaint is under the Five-Man .Act (Acts 1911 p. 145, §8020a et seq. Burns 1914), and alleges that appellant, on February 5, 1914, was the contractor engaged in remodeling, repairing and altering a certain building known as the Robertson Store in South Bend; that for the purpose of, and to be used in, this work, defendant constructed a scaffold and in the building “thereof negligently and carelessly failed to use enough nails and nails of sufficient size and strength and * * * negligently and carelessly failed to brace and construct said scaffold with and out of a sufficient number of timbers, braces, crosspieces, supports, uprights and ledgers, and with timbers, braces, crosspieces, supports, uprights and ledgers of sufficient size and strength, and by reason thereof the said scaffold was weak, defective and unsafe for defendant’s employes to [103]*103work upon, for which, purpose it was intended by defendant to be used; * * * that defendant negligently permitted said scaffold to be used by plaintiff and plaintiff’s co-employes to work upon, well knowing that same was unsafe and dangerous, and liable to collapse at any time on account of its defective construction.” This complaint charges two specific acts of negligence in the construction of the scaffold — insufficient nailing and insufficient bracing; also negligence in permitting appellee to use it. There, is abundant evidence to sustain charges of negligent construction; in fact, appellant does not seriously contend that the evidence in these respects is not sufficient;, but it most earnestly insists that, had appellee observed any care at .all, he would not have gone on the scaffold until it was made safe, and that his failure to observe and comprehend the visible defects was such negligence as, at law, will preclude a recovery.

In this connection appellant also argues that the evidence does not bring appellee within the act on which the complaint is said to rest, for the reason that the evidence shows that he was an independent workman, employing his own helper, and in absolute charge of the work he was doing at the time of the accident; that it' was his duty, under the law, to see that the scaffold was safe, and his failure to do so was a violation of §4 of an act approved March 6, 1911, §3862d Burns 1914, (Acts 1911 p. 597) ; that this act was for the purpose of protecting life, and applied to all persons alike engaged in the erection and alteration of the store front mentioned in the complaint. While on the other hand, appellee insists that he was in the employ of appellant as an ordinary employe, and appellant’s neglect to furnish him a safe scaffold to work on was a violation of §4, supra, and although the danger was apparent, the fact that he continued at work would not be a defense [104]*104to this action, nor make him guilty of contributory negligence, nor charge him with having assumed the risk of such employment under §§2 and 3 of the act approved March 2, 1911, supra (§§8020b, 8020c Burns 1914). Section 1 of the act approved March 6, 1911, supra (§3862a Burns 1914), provides: “That every employer, or person, managing or conducting any business, or work, or plant in the State of Indiana, of the character mentioned in this act, is, for the purposes of this act, conducting a dangerous occupation at the time of such occurrence, and subject to the provisions of this act.” And §4 of the same act makes it “the duty of all owners, contractors, s.ub-contractors, corporations, agents,,, or persons whatsoever, engaged in the * * * construction, erection, repair, alteration * * * of any building * * * to see and to require * * * that all scaffolding, staging * * * and all contrivances used are amply, adequately and properly constructed, to bear all weights and adapted to and perform the services and meet the requirements for which they are designed or used, with safety '* * *,” and for a failure to do these things §5, supra (§3862e Burns 1914), provides a penalty.

3.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Gen. Motors LLC
339 F. Supp. 3d 262 (S.D. Illinois, 2018)
Hale v. Peabody Coal Company
343 N.E.2d 316 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1976)
Universal CIT Credit Corporation v. Shepler
329 N.E.2d 620 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1975)
Jones v. Indianapolis Power & Light Co.
304 N.E.2d 337 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1973)
Wyler v. Lilly Varnish Co.
252 N.E.2d 824 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1969)
Meineke v. Hollowell
200 N.E.2d 541 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1964)
City of Logansport v. Gammill
145 N.E.2d 908 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1957)
Ft. Wayne Transit, Inc. v. Shomo, Etc.
143 N.E.2d 431 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1957)
Burks v. Walters
141 N.E.2d 872 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1957)
KINDLER, ETC. v. Edwards
130 N.E.2d 491 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1955)
Dallas & Mavis Forwarding Co., Inc. v. Liddell
126 N.E.2d 18 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1955)
Dickover, Admr. v. Owen
151 N.E. 349 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1926)
Union Traction Co. v. Alstadt
143 N.E. 879 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1924)
Zainey v. Rieman
142 N.E. 397 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1924)
Grabowski v. Benzsa
80 Ind. App. 214 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1923)
People v. Elkus
211 P. 34 (California Court of Appeal, 1922)
Citizens Telephone Co. v. Prickett
125 N.E. 193 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1919)
Sargent Paint Co. v. Petrovitzky
124 N.E. 881 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 N.E. 561, 187 Ind. 99, 1918 Ind. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kawneer-manufacturing-co-v-kalter-ind-1918.