Kearney v. Massman Construction Co.

18 N.W.2d 481, 247 Wis. 56, 1945 Wisc. LEXIS 223
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 N.W.2d 481 (Kearney v. Massman Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kearney v. Massman Construction Co., 18 N.W.2d 481, 247 Wis. 56, 1945 Wisc. LEXIS 223 (Wis. 1945).

Opinion

Martin, J.

Appellants contend: (1) That if an angle iron came down the pipe chase and hit the plaintiff, any one of six people could have caused its fall; (2) that it would have been impossible for an angle iron the size of the one in question to have thread its way through the openings through the four floors; (3) that there is a complete lack of credible evidence that plaintiff was hit by an angle iron at all; (4) that the specific act of negligence found by the trial court is not established by any evidence; ( 5 ) that under the credible evidence *61 the judgment must be grounded either upon a story which negatives liability or upon mere speculation and conjecture; and (6) that the damages awarded are grossly excessive.

The case having been tried to the court, we are not at liberty to change the findings unless they are contrary to the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence. This is an elementary rule which requires no citation of authorities.

Appellants’ reference to any one of six people who could have caused the angle iron to fall as found by the trial court includes the four guards who, at the time, were on duty on their respective floors, and the two electricians who were working on the fifth floor. The four guards were employees of the United States Rubber Company; the two electricians were employees of the defendants. Plaintiff was guard on the first floor. A man named Nielson was guard on the second floor; Erwin Hoffman, on the third floor; Fred J. Pfister, on the fourth floor; and Leroy H. Zellmer, on the fifth floor. Nielson was not a witness; he could not be located at the time of the trial.

Zellmer, the fifth-floor guard, testified that the two electricians and himself were the only ones on the fifth floor; that the two electricians were working around the section of the floor where the opening was; that the electricians’ platform was not very far from the opening; that he was probably fifteen feet from the opening, eating his lunch at the time; that when he had about finished his lunch he heard someone say, “Look out below,” or “Duck your head;” that he then looked down and saw plaintiff on the first floor; that the two electricians left his floor; that while he was eating lunch the two electricians were within fifteen feet of him; that he heard plaintiff holler for help from the first floor; that there were angle irons around there on the fifth floor.

Pfister, guard on the fourth floor, testified that at the time of the accident he was standing right by the pipes; that he was looking down to the first floor and someone said, “Get *62 your head out of there;” that the next thing he heard was Mr. Kearney’s holler for help. He testified:

“Q. Who did you hear holler ‘Put your head back?’ A. Well, someone on the fifth floor. And I knew it wasn’t the guard, because I knew his voice, and he had just left a few seconds before that.
“Q. What happened after you heard him say, ‘Pull your head back?’ A. Well, something went past me. I don’t know what it was. It went so fast.”

Hoffman, guard on the third floor, testified that he was on the third floor about twenty-five feet from the opening, near the elevator when he heard somebody call, “Please help me, somebody;” that it sounded like it came from the opening; that he rushed over there and saw Mr. Kearney on the floor with his arms around a pipe and bleeding; that he called to' the guard on' the second floor to go down and help; that he went down to the first floor and the two electricians came down at approximately the same time; that he had them take Mr. Kearney over to the hospital across the road; that he told the men at that time not to touch anything that was on the floor; that there was an angle iron there. He testified:

“Q. Did anybody attempt to pick up the angle iron? A: Well, I told the boys, the electricians, that they couldn’t touch anything, that it would have to be left right there.
“Q. Did anybody try to pick it up ? A. Well, the electricians came in and went for that angle iron, and I told them not to touch it.”

He further testified that he was down on the first floor when the electricians came down; that the angle iron was lying right at the opening; that one of the electricians bent down and wanted to pick it up and he said, “Don’t touch anything;” that he then said, “Did that come down? Did you throw it down?” and the electrician said, “No, it fell down;” that the electrician said it fell down from the fifth floor.

*63 The openings in the floors were five feet in length and nine inches in width. These openings were surrounded by a concrete curb raised six inches above the floor level. The angle iron in question was one and one-half inches wide and twenty incites long.

Lincoln Freuck, the foreman electrician, examined adversely, testified that he and Thorson were working on the fifth floor at the time of the accident; that they were the only ones working that night on any floor; that they were the only two, outside of the guards, on the premises; that they knew the guards were using the pipe chase for intercommunication ; that there were angle irons all over the building; that they used the angle irons for- bracing, putting brackets on the wall; that in performance of the electric work he and his fellow electrician had to push their work platform around to different places on the floor; that they had to do some electric work near the hole in the fifth floor; that they were moving about a platform five feet wide, eight feet long, and five feet high, on casters; that in moving the platform they passed right next to the hole. He testified:

“Q. Well, as a matter of fact, when you pushed that horse [platform] you went right close by the opening, did you not? A. Yes, we had to; there was only a small space to move by.
“Q. And as you passed by you could see the opening, couldn’t you? A. Oh, sure, if you looked that way you could see it.
“Q. Now isn’t it a fact that you heard someone holler for help after you had stopped pushing the horse, or the platform ? A. Well, it must have been after we stopped pushing, because while you were moving that you couldn’t hear anything besides. . . .
“Q. I am asking you now, did you testify before Court Commissioner Quick that you saw the angle iron? A. All right, I did.
“Q. And was that angle iron the same as angle irons that were on the fifth floor that night? A. Well, those angle irons were all over the building. . . .
*64 “Q. As you pushed your wagon [platform] from place to place you sometimes ran into one of those? A. Not usually. They were usually kept out of the way. Sometimes they were lying on the floor.

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.W.2d 481, 247 Wis. 56, 1945 Wisc. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kearney-v-massman-construction-co-wis-1945.