Kennedy v. Hawkins

102 P. 733, 54 Or. 164, 1909 Ore. LEXIS 27
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 6, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 102 P. 733 (Kennedy v. Hawkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. Hawkins, 102 P. 733, 54 Or. 164, 1909 Ore. LEXIS 27 (Or. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Slater

delivered the opinion of the court.

1. The action is based upon an alleged tort. In order to maintain an action for an injury to person or property by reason of negligence or want of due care, there must be shown to exist some obligation or duty towards the plaintiff which the defendant has left undischarged or unfulfilled. This is the basis on which the cause of action rests.

2. There can be no fault, negligence, or breach of duty where there is no act, service, or contract which a party is bound to perform or fulfill. The complaint should allege what duty was imposed upon defendants towards-plaintiff, or state facts from which the law will imply the duty, and then allege a breach or negligent performance of the duty. 14 Pl. & Pr. 331, 332.

3. The substance of the facts stated are, that plaintiff was rightfully an occupant of the building, and that the defendants undertook to repair or underpin the wall thereof. The essential nature of the work being dangerous to the persons and property of the occupants of the building, the law imposes upon those who undertook to perform it the duty of using reasonable skill and care in the performance of the task, although, as to plaintiff, they were not bound to undertake it.

4. The right of action comes from a duty imposed by law, and not from a duty arising out of contract, because no contractual relation existed between plaintiff and defendants. Therefore delay in beginning the work, [168]*168if any, can be of no avail to plaintiff (1 Cooley, Torts, 240), for that would amount only to a breach or negligent performance of duty arising out of contractual relations existing between either the owner of the building and Hawkins, her agent, or between her and the defendants, Bingham and McClelland. The effect of the averment that Hawkins, as agent of the owner, employed his codefendants to perform certain work upon .the building, is to deprive them of the character of trespassers, and to authorize them to enter upon the premises for the business they undertook.

5. The nature of the action being that of a pure tort, the right to recover must be confined to a negligent act or omission of the defendants done in the course of the performance of the task which they undertook, and which was the proximate cause of the building falling. The complaint does not point out specifically the particular act of negligence or , omission of duty relied upon, but avers generally that defendants “attempted to put supports and braces under said building, and that the same was negligently and carelessly done, and without due and proper precautions, and that said defendants negligently and carelessly failed to place the proper support, foundation, and braces under the foundation.” It is always necessary in pleading negligence to allege that some act was negligently done, or that something that ought to have been done was omitted, but it is not necessary to set forth the particular facts that show the act or omission to have been negligent. Cederson v. Oregon Navigation Co., 38 Or. 343 (62 Pac. 637: 63 Pac. 763).

6. But, when a complaint contains a general averment of negligence, and the defendant joins issue without moving to make the pleading more definite, proof of any negligence within the general scope of the allegation is competent.- Jones v. City of Portland, 35 Or. 512 (58 Pac. 657).

7. This, however, does not relieve the plaintiff from proving a particular act of negligence upon which she [169]*169bases her right to recover, and in this respect we think she has failed.

8. Defendants admit in the pleadings that they undertook to underpin the foundation, and that while in the performance thereof the building fell, but this of itself, taken in connection with the surrounding circumstances, does not establish negligence; for no man, 'whether skilled or unskilled, undertakes that the task he assumes shali be performed successfully and without fault or error. He undertakes for good faith and integrity, but not for infallibility, and he is liable to his employer for negligence, bad faith, or dishonesty, but not for losses consequent upon mere errors of judgment. 2 Cooley, Torts, 1386.

9. With this preliminary statement of the legal principles governing the consideration of the case, we proceed to the facts disclosed by the plaintiff’s testimony. Shea testifies that about March 4th he began tearing down the old buildings on his lot, which work consumed about ten days, and then he began the excavation ; that 20 or 25 days before the accident he had a conversation with Hawkins about the necessity of underpinning the foundation of the latter’s building, and, at the latter’s request, offered to secure the services of his brick mason to do the work; that a few days thereafter he told Hawkins that his mason could not do the work, and thereafter Hawkins employed Bingham and McClelland; that Bingham came to the premises, examined the situation, and between them they agreed with Shea that the latter had left sufficient soil next the building to reasonably insure its safety. At that time Shea had excavated to the full depth of his basement at a distance from the building standing on lot 7, but had left next thereto a bank of earth, estimated by him to be three feet across at the foot wall, and sloping off to the north to a width of ten or fifteen feet. Shea is very indefinite and uncertain as to the precise time this conversation with Bingham [170]*170took place with relation to the beginning of defendant’s work, but the time is stated definitely by Hawkins in his disposition offered by the plaintiff. He testifies that on Thursday, March 28th, Shea informed him that his mason could not do the work, and that he immediately sought the services of Bingham and McClelland, finding the latter engaged at the Wells-Fargo building, then in course of construction. The former was out of town, but he saw him the next morning, and perfected an agreement with him to underpin the foundation. The defendants were to get their material on the ground the next day and begin the task Monday, April 1st, which they did. It is shown that they are experienced men in that class of work. On the first day a pit was dug under the wall at the east corner of the building to the depth of Shea’s intended excavation, and a brick pier was built therein, and was completed on Tuesday morning a short time before the accident occurred, which was about 11 o’clock of that morning. A second pit of the same character had been dug at the center or middle of the wall. A mason was engaged in constructing a brick pier and two or three courses of brick had been laid. One of the defendant’s employees had started to excavate a third pit at the northwest corner of the building, when the bank of earth supporting the wall gave way, and the wall from the northwest corner back to the completed brick pier fell. The soil, to a depth of about four feet, consisted of clay, under-which was a stratum of sand.

Plaintiff apparently attempts to place the negligence of the defendants upon the claim that these pits were unnecessarily large, and that but one should have been dug at a time, but no one experienced in that work undertook so to testify.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 P. 733, 54 Or. 164, 1909 Ore. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-hawkins-or-1909.