Kuptz v. Ralph Sollitt & Sons Const. Co.

88 F.2d 532, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3185
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 24, 1937
DocketNo. 8143
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 88 F.2d 532 (Kuptz v. Ralph Sollitt & Sons Const. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kuptz v. Ralph Sollitt & Sons Const. Co., 88 F.2d 532, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3185 (5th Cir. 1937).

Opinions

STRUM, District Judge.

This action to recover for personal injuries alleged to be the result of the defendant’s negligence was instituted by John J. Kuptz and Employers’ Liability Assurance Corporation, as plaintiffs, against Ralph Sollitt & Sons Construction Company.

Defendant-appellee was general contractor for the construction of a new post office building in Tyler, Tex. David Gray was subcontractor for the erection of wooden concrete forms, and Meyer Light Company for electrical work. Both were “independent subcontractors.”

Plaintiff Kuptz was employed by the electrical subcontractor as foreman, and had other men working under him. The general contractor, through its superintendent, exercised general supervision and control over the progress of the work, coordinating the various subcontractors, and directing them when to commence their work.

The building was of reinforced concrete construction, necessitating the erection of wooden forms or troughs around the horizontal steel beams in the flat area of the roof, in which forms concrete was to be poured to incase the beams. The forms were mere temporary work, to be removed as soon as the concrete hardened. The forms consisted of a bottom board, nailed to upright side boards, the top being left open to receive the concrete. These forms, erected by workmen under subcontractor David Gray, derived no support from the steel roof beams, but were held in place by wooden braces placed beneath them and resting on the floor below. It was customary, and probably known to the general contractor, that the subcontractors’ workmen would walk and stand on these forms in performing their tasks. It was the duty of the electricians to install metal conduits for wiring through the wooden forms on the roof before the concrete was poured, so that after the concrete hardened the system of wiring could be completed through the concrete.

At the time of his injury, Kuptz was on the uncompleted roof of the building for this purpose, having observed that the wooden forms were in place and ready for installation of electrical conduits. The general foreman, an employee of Sollitt & Co., had also told plaintiff the roof was ready for electrical work. Kuptz testified that the general foreman “made some remark that day about the work on the roof being ready, to go ahead and get it done,” after which he started to do the work. Kuptz did not inspect the forms to see that they were safe, testifying that such procedure was not customary. [534]*534Plaintiff also testified that he would probably have gone ahead with the work, whether he had been directed by the foreman to do so or not.

After working on the roof for several hours, Kuptz stepped on one of the' forms which had shortly before been put in place, and which Kuptz testified appeared to him to be the same as other forms, but which in fact was inadequately supported from below and 'was temporarily incomplete. When Kuptz stepped upon the bottom of the form, it gave way, dropping him some fifty feet to the concrete second floor of the building, inflicting severe and lasting physical injuries. The incomplete and insecure condition of the form was open and patent, not being concealed by any other work, though Kuptz testified that he was unaware of such conditions.

Kuptz charges negligence against the general contractor in failing to inspect the bracing of the wooden forms, and in knowingly permitting him to go upon the roof for the purpose stated without warning him of the insecure condition of the form in question.

Coplaintiff, Employers’ Liability Assurance Company, is the insurance carrier of Meyer Light Company under the Texas Workmen’s Compensation Laws (Rev.St. Tex.1925, art. 8306 et seq. as amended [Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 8306 et seq.]). It paid Kuptz all compensation and medical expenses required by that law, aggregating nearly $5,000, and claims by subrogation (article 8307, § 6a, Tex.Rev.St. 1925) and by assignment from Kuptz, a recovery against defendant Sollitt & Co. to the extent of the money so paid. Standard Accident Ins. Co. v. Pennsylvania Car Co. (C.C.A.) 49 F.(2d) 73.

At the conclusion of all the evidence, the trial judge directed a verdict for defendant. This appeal is. from the consequent judgment.

As an employee of the' electrical subcontractor, Kuptz was an invitee upon the premises, to whom defendant owed only the duty to use due care, consistent with all the circumstances, to keep the premises in safe condition for plaintiff’s use for the purpose for which he was there. Middleton v. P. Sanford Ross (C.C.A.) 213 F. 6; Resnikoff v. Friedman, 124 Minn. 343, 144 N.W. 1095. Defendant owed plaintiff, as a subcontractor’s employee, no higher duty than it would owe its own employee, which is to use reasonable care to furnish him with a reasonably safe place to work and to warn him of any unusual or latent dangers incident to his employment. An experienced employee assumes a risk that is obvious, of common knowledge to those engaged in the occupation, and necessarily incident to the doing of the work, although he does not assume a risk arising from the employer’s negligence, of which the employee is not aware. Yates v. Atlantic Ice & Coal Co. (C.C.A.) 76 F.(2d) 86; Missouri Valley, etc., Co. v. Walquist (C.C.A.) 243 F. 120.

“The obligation of a master to provide reasonably safe places and structures for his servants to work upon does not impose upon him the duty, as towards them, of keeping a building, which they are employed in erecting, in a safe condition at every moment of their work, so far as its safety depends upon the due performance of that work by them and their fellows.” Armour v. Hahn, 111 U.S. 313, 4 S.Ct. 433, 434, 28 L.Ed. 440.

Every workman understands that there is more or less danger incident to the erection of a building, and thát conditions of safety will change from time to time as the work progresses. He knows, as plaintiff himself testified, that he must exercise reasonable care to discover and avoid dangers incident to the work; excluding, of course,- extraneous or concealed dangers, which the exercise of ordinary prudence would not reveal.

Defendant did not undertake to furnish plaintiff with a scaffolding as an instrumentality in performing plaintiff’s work, for which reason such cases as Chambers v. American Tin Plate Co. (C.C.A.) 129 F. 561; American Shipbuilding Co. v. Lorenski (C.C.A.) 204 F. 39; Texas Co. v. Strange, 62 Tex.Civ.App. 642, 132 S.W. 370; and Pettyjohn & Sons v. Basham, 126 Va. 72, 100 S.E. 813, 38 A.L.R. 391, in which the employer did undertake to erect or furnish a scaffold, are inapposite here. In Middleton v. P. Sanford Ross (C.C.A.) 213 F. 6, the defendant’s employers were guilty of active negligence. In Wilson v. Hibbert (C.C.A.) 194 F. 838, there was evidence that the wall which caused the injury was completed and accepted work which had later become undermined, a latent defect.

Defendant did not direct plaintiff as to the method of performing his work, nor is it shown that defendant or its rep[535]*535resentative actually knew of the insecure condition of the form. The charge is that a reasonably prudent inspection would have revealed the danger. If the insecure condition of the form could have been ascertained by a reasonably prudent inspection, plaintiff was as much bound in duty to himself to exercise the prudence of making that inspection as was the defendant, and could have as easily discovered the danger.

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

Related

Eastman Kodak Company v. Mrs. Peggy Martin
362 F.2d 684 (Fifth Circuit, 1966)
Stevens v. E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co.
208 F.2d 415 (Fifth Circuit, 1953)
Carroll v. Lanza
116 F. Supp. 491 (W.D. Arkansas, 1953)
Wood v. Kane Boiler Works, Inc.
238 S.W.2d 172 (Texas Supreme Court, 1951)
Henger v. Smith
222 S.W.2d 422 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1949)
Union Tank & Supply Co. v. Kelley
167 F.2d 811 (Fifth Circuit, 1948)
Amacker v. Skelly Oil Co.
132 F.2d 431 (Fifth Circuit, 1942)
Burnett v. Amalgamated Phosphate Co.
96 F.2d 974 (Fifth Circuit, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 F.2d 532, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuptz-v-ralph-sollitt-sons-const-co-ca5-1937.