Langston v. Fiske-Carter Construction Co.

185 S.E. 62, 180 S.C. 113, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 110
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 2, 1936
Docket14268
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 185 S.E. 62 (Langston v. Fiske-Carter Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langston v. Fiske-Carter Construction Co., 185 S.E. 62, 180 S.C. 113, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 110 (S.C. 1936).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Fishburne.

*116 This action was brought by the plaintiff for the recovery of damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him on June 5, 1934, while employed by the defendant, Fiske-Carter Construction Company, as a water boy.

The defendant was engaged at the time in the building and construction of an addition to the McLeod Infirmary, in the City of Florence. It was the duty of the plaintiff to carry buckets of drinking water to other laborers and carpenters who were engaged in work upon the building, on its second floor. In order to do this, the plaintiff used a ladder, furnished for this purpose by the defendant, the bottom end of which rested unsecured upon the ground. The ladder extended upward at an angle of 35 or 40 degrees, and its upper end rested upon the concrete floor of the second story. An elevator was in operation in the rear of the building for the purpose of carrying up building material from the basement to the upper floors, but no workmen were permitted to use the elevator. At the time of the accident the building- had not reached the stage of construction where any stairways had been built, and the workmen were confined to the use of outside ladders to reach the place in the building where their work called them.

The basement of the building was about four feet below the level of the ground, and, as said, the upper end of the ladder rested upon the concrete laid for the second floor. The work of construction had been going on for about a month. Five or six ladders were arranged about the outside of the building at strategic points, most convenient for the use of the workmen, in going up and down. The ladders were not fastened, were movable, and were always taken away from the building every week-end, to discourage trespassers from interfering with the partially completed structure, and they were replaced during the work week. It was the duty of the foreman or the superintendent to direct the removal of these ladders from place to place as the progress of the work might require.

*117 At the time of the accident, the plaintiff was walking up a ladder which was placed against the middle of the building on the street side, and which had been located there and used by him and other workmen for one or two weeks previous to the accident. He had a bucket of water in each hand, one of which was for the colored laborers and one for the white laborers. According to his statement, as he reached a point about three feet from the ground, and had placed his foot or feet on the third round, it broke, precipitating him to the ground. He fell upon his head and side, and received the injuries of which he now complains. In falling his head came in contact with an exposed nail, projecting from a timber lying on the ground, from which he sustained a wound over his left eye: The ladder was examined after the accident, and this round was found to have an old crack on the underside, and the examination also showed where it was freshly broken. The testimony for the defendant tends to show that the rung or round in question had not broken, but that it had a sag of about one and one-half inches in the middle; that it had an old lateral crack, and showed evidence of a fresh crack; and one of the witnesses for the defendant described the defect in the rung by stating that it exhibited -a “shivered” condition. And this same witness testified that “they never told us to stay off it. I guess if Mr. Baker (the superintendent) had saw the shiver, he would have kept us off it,” and “would have had a new rung put in it.”

At least two or three witnesses had noticed the old break on the underside of the rung, but the plaintiff testified that he was entirely ignorant of any defective condition in the ladder. It appears from the testimony that it was not a homemade ladder, but a manufactured ladder of the usual type, with round hickory rungs, and the plaintiff stated that it was an old ladder, and had seen much use. The’crack or defect in the rung, according to all of the witnesses, was not noticeable from the top side. It was “behind the ladder.”

There was also testimony for the defense to the effect that, *118 as the plaintiff started up this ladder with a bucket of water in each hand, a workman, who was idle at the time and standing a few feet from the foot of the ladder, asked him for a match; that there was mud on plaintiff’s feet, and as he turned his head his foot slipped, and he fell.

The specifications of negligence alleged in the complaint are these: (a) In failing to provide the plaintiff with a safe place to work, in that the ladder furnished the plaintiff was defective and unsafe for use; (b) in failing to provide the plaintiff with safe and suitable equipment with which to work, in that the said ladder had a cracked or otherwise defective rung, and was unsafe for use by the plaintiff; (c) in failing to inspect the ladder; (d) in failing to supervise and superintend .the work and the equipment; (e) in failing to warn the plaintiff that the ladder was defective and unsafe for use, when the condition of the ladder was known, or ought to have been known, to the defendant; and (f) in allowing the ground about the ladder to become cluttered with boards and pieces of timber containing exposed nails.

The answer admitted the employment of the plaintiff, denied negligence, and set up the defense of contributory negligence and assumption of risk.

The trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $12,500.00.

During the course of the trial motions were made for a nonsuit, and a directed verdict, and for a new trial. In addition to the grounds of the motion for a directed verdict, the motion for a new trial included the additional ground that the verdict was so excessive that it should be set aside. All of these motions were overruled.

The first question raised by the exceptions which we shall discuss is, Was there a variance between the allegations of the complaint and the proof ?

It is earnestly contended by the appellant that there is no charge in the complaint that the ladder used by the plaintiff was provided by the defendant as a means of ingress to and *119 egress from the building, nor that it was being so used by the plaintiff upon the occasion upon which he was injured. It is argued that the plaintiff shifted his ground of attack from that alleged in his complaint; that the complaint alleges negligence against the defendant in the furnishing of a defective ladder, which is a simple tool, but that the proof, if any, tends to make out a case of negligence in furnishing a defective ladder to be used as a stairway in entering and leaving the place of work; and it is further submitted that this alleged change of front on the part of the plaintiff was made to escape the application of the “simple tool” doctrine.

The Circuit Judge, under his charge, left it to the jury to determine the nature and character of the ladder and the use to which it was put.

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Bluebook (online)
185 S.E. 62, 180 S.C. 113, 1936 S.C. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langston-v-fiske-carter-construction-co-sc-1936.