King v. Winslett

248 So. 2d 566, 287 Ala. 98, 1971 Ala. LEXIS 688
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 29, 1971
Docket6 Div. 612
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 248 So. 2d 566 (King v. Winslett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. Winslett, 248 So. 2d 566, 287 Ala. 98, 1971 Ala. LEXIS 688 (Ala. 1971).

Opinion

COLEMAN, Justice.

Plaintiffs appeal from judgment for defendants in an action for death of Kyser King, Jr., alleged to have been proximately caused by the negligence of defendants.

Plaintiffs allege that they are the widow and dependents of decedent; that decedent was an employee of Birmingham Sash & Door Company, a corporation; that decedent was a business invitee at a partially constructed home owned by the defendant Hamrick; that decedent .was delivering building supplies ordered for delivery to said house by the defendant Winslett who was supervising the construction of the house under the control of defendant Bessemer Scaffold Company, a corporation; that defendants negligently allowed an unguarded opening or hole in the floor of the house to remain unguarded at the time decedent was in the house as a business invitee; that decedent fell through said unguarded hole in the floor and sustained injuries of which he died; and that the injury and death of decedent was proximately caused by the concurring negligence of the defendants in negligently maintaining or permitting an unguarded hole in the house as aforesaid.

Plaintiffs further aver that they were dependents of decedent; that the aforesaid employment of decedent was subject to the Alabama Workmen’s Compensation Law; that by reason of “. . . . the debt to the said Kyser King, Jr., . . . .” plaintiffs are receiving compensation payments from decedent’s employer or its in[100]*100surer; and that plaintiffs bring this action pursuant to § 312, Title 26, Code 1940.

Plaintiffs struck all defendants except Winslett. The court gave the affirmative charge without hypothesis in favor of Winslett. The giving of this charge for Winslett is assigned as error.

The evidence is to effect that defendant Winslett was supervising construction of the house under a contract with defendant Hamrick; that the house had been under construction about three weeks and was about a third completed; the frame appears to have been erected; siding and weather boarding were up; windows and doors were open; the roof had not been put on the house other than the black felt, temporary roof; the subflooring had been put in but not the top flooring.

No window or door had been installed. Where a door or window is referred to, the reference is merely to an opening between studs or framing in which a door or '.window would be installed later. There was no door or window which could be shut so as to close the opening.

A number of pictures of the house were introduced in evidence and a blackboard diagram was used in examination of witnesses. The blackboard diagram is not in the record, and, for that reason, the testimony is vague in some respects. As we understand it, a 2-inch by 12-inch plank about 12 feet long afforded access from the ground to the open front porch; the access was to a room or vestibule. In going in a straight line from the front opening to the back of the house, one would pass through the living room or vestibule area to a space for a door opening into the den; a few feet inside this door opening there was an opening or hole in the den floor; this opening in the floor was for a fireplace and chimney to be built from the basement up through the roof. The hole in the floor was a rectangle about 8 feet long and 33 inches wide. There was an opening for a window in the wall at the far side of the opening in the floor. This wall was the back wall of the house.

Defendant Winslett had ordered 35 sheets of plywood from decedent’s employer. About lunch time, decedent drove his employer’s truck carrying the plywood to the house site. No one else was present. Around two o’clock in the afternoon, decedent was found lying on the basement floor under the hole with a head injury. The hole in the floor was not covered. There was no railing or barricade around the hole. One piece of plywood was lying on the den floor and part of the plywood sheet was lying partially over the opening. The plywood sheet was three-eighths of an inch thick, 8 feet long, and 4 feet wide. Decedent died from the head injury.

Plaintiffs’ witness, Shelton, who was a truck driver for decedent’s employer, testified that he had no trouble seeing the hole in the floor when he walked into the house on the afternoon of decedent’s injury.1 The trial court in colloquy with counsel remarked :

“I looked at all the exhibits and every one shows this hole back in the den and from the front door all the way back, you can see it.....”

The conclusion seems inescapable that the hole in the den floor was plainly visible and open and obvious.

[101]*101A witness for plaintiffs testified that he was a general contractor and had been in the business for eleven years in the area where the house was. In answer to a hypothetical question asking for the opinion of the witness as to whether an ordinarily skilled contractor in the ordinarily skilled construction of such a house in that location would have left such a hole uncovered without barricade around the hole or a warning, the witness testified:

“A In my opinion, in the construction work it’s a matter of thinking ahead; trying to eliminate any provisions where a party could get hurt. If this opening was in a position where an employee or a trespasser might get hurt, then in my opinion it should have been covered or barricaded or a warning sign of some kind put up there.”

As we understand the evidence, the foregoing is a statement of the material evidence bearing on the question whether the defendant was entitled to the affirmative charge without hypothesis.

Plaintiffs rely heavily on Foster & Creighton Co. v. St. Paul Mercury Indem. Co., 264 Ala. 581, 88 So.2d 825, wherein this court held that a defendant was not entitled to the affirmative charge in an action for the death of a workman who had fallen through a hole in the third floor of a building under construction. Foster & Creighton differs from the instant case in several particulars. In paragraph [1] of the opinion, four tendencies of the evidence are set out which made the issue of appellant’s liability a jury question. The second tendency was that after the employees of the decedent’s employer, Shook & Fletcher, had come on the premises to work, the appellant, Foster & Creighton, had covered the holes on the second and third floors. The fourth tendency is that, on the morning of the accident, appellant’s carpenter came to the third floor to put a guard rail around hole No. 2, and this fact was known to the employees of decedent’s employer. The importance of these tendencies of the evidence is pointed out in paragraph [4] where this court said:

“. . . . Foster & Creighton’s liability arose out of its assumption of the duty to cover the hole through which Robinson fell, and there is no evidence in the record to indicate that Shook & Fletcher assumed a similar duty.” (264 Ala. at 590, 88 So.2d at 853.)

There is however, an even more important difference between Foster & Creighton and the instant case. In Foster & Creighton, there was evidence to support a finding that decedent’s injury was the proximate result of Foster & Creighton’s negligence in failing to cover the hole. In the instant case there is no such evidence.

In Lamson & Sessions Bolt Co. v. McCarty, 234 Ala. 60, 173 So.

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Bluebook (online)
248 So. 2d 566, 287 Ala. 98, 1971 Ala. LEXIS 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-winslett-ala-1971.