Lauritsen v. American Bridge Co.

92 N.W. 475, 87 Minn. 518, 1902 Minn. LEXIS 676
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 5, 1902
DocketNos. 13,146-(171)
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 92 N.W. 475 (Lauritsen v. American Bridge Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lauritsen v. American Bridge Co., 92 N.W. 475, 87 Minn. 518, 1902 Minn. LEXIS 676 (Mich. 1902).

Opinion

LOVELY, J.

Plaintiff was employed by the Electric Steel Elevator Company during the fall of 1901 to assist in the “installation” of the operating machinery of an elevator which it was then constructing in Minneapolis. He was injured by a fall from a movable scaffold maintained in the building by the servants of the American Bridge Company, defendant, who were engaged under a contract with the [520]*520electric company to execute the structural work. Plaintiff recovered a verdict. Defendant asked for judgment, or for a new trial in the alternative, which motion was denied. From this order the case is brought to this court on appeal.

Evidence relevant to the issues tends to support the following facts: Previous to September 28, 1901, defendant had been engaged for some time on the structural steel work of the new elevator, and had not finished on December 5. During the intermediate period plaintiff and other millwrights were engaged for the electric company in “installing” or setting up and perfecting the machinery to be used in operating the elevator. The millwrights were employed by the electric company, while the mechanics engaged in the structural work were under the control of defendant; each set of workmen being under the orders of a superintendent. The contrivance occasioning plaintiff’s injury was a scaffolding of two 4x6 inch timbers suspended eighteen feet above the floor, and sustained by ropes. These ropes were attached to overhead standards, and tied under the timbers, which were sixteen feet in length, running north and south parallel to each other, and1 fourteen feet apart. Across these timbers a single plank a foot in width, sixteen feet long, and three inches thick was loosely placed, and could be moved as occasion required. It was intended for the servants of defendant as a standing place while engaged on the steel work overhead.

While this temporary scaffold was put up and maintained in this way by the bridge company for its own employees, it appears that for two months before the accident the employees of the electric company found it convenient to occupy it occasionally, without interference or objection from defendant, whose foreman was in charge of the structural work during that time; and the evidence very strongly leads to the conclusion that in the “installation” work such use was required, and that either this scaffold or an appliance of a similar character would have had to be placed in the same position by the millwrights if they could not make use of the supports and plank thus maintained by defendant. It must also be stated that the servants of both companies were properly engaged in their respective employments within the building at the time. During the afternoon of December 5 plaintiff had occasion to step [521]*521upon the plank to do some work on the mill machinery, and while standing there, so occupied, defendant’s foreman and two of its employees undertook to raise the scaffolding. While attempting to do this, one of them (Anderson) untied the rope which sustained the timber at the southeast corner, intending to raise it, but the nope inadvertently slipped through his hands, the timber dropped, the plank resting thereon careened and fell, precipitating plaintiff upon the floor eighteen feet below, whereby he sustained the injuries for which he recovered the verdict.

At the trial plaintiff testified that when he fell he was standing upon the plank; that he had received no warning of the intention of defendant’s servants to interfere with the scaffolding. On the other hand, servants of defendant stated that immediately before plaintiff fell they gave him explicit warning that they were going to raise the timbers, at which time he was not upon the plank; that, after having lifted the timber on the corresponding side of the platform, but at an inopportune moment, he stepped on the plank, and fell, as the rope slipped through Anderson’s hands. The conflict in the evidence in these material respects was sharply defined, and presented a clean-cut issue of fact for the jury, which has been determined by the verdict, and there is nothing so inherently improbable in either narrative as to justify our interference with the result on that account. If the facts as stated by plaintiff sustain the verdict, it must stand, unless defendant’s rights have been prejudiced by erroneous instructions or orders of the court below.

After describing the facts involved with commendable perspicuity, the learned trial court in its charge told the jury that it was the duty of Anderson, under the circumstances as they existed, to exercise ordinary care for the safety of the plaintiff in moving the platform, and that the test of such care should be what an ordinarily careful and prudent man engaged in work of this kind under the same or similar circumstances would have done. This instruction is objected to, and upon defendant’s claim involves the principal legal question raised by its assignments upon the theory that the employees of the Electric Steel Elevator Company, while using the platforms, were mere licensees, towards whom the defendant [522]*522and its servants owed no duty but to refrain from doing any act which would necessarily result in injury to them, which was no more than to refrain from wilful and wanton acts of negligence.

There is little of practical benefit in adopting abstract terms in instructions to juries upon the relative obligations of individuals to concrete duties. This is very much the case in attempting to apply the refined distinctions of the civil law discriminating between ordinary care and slight care in issues of negligence. Such subtleties tend to obscure, rather than illuminate, the practical questions to be determined, and are usually avoided by the courts of this country. So, too, it is somewhat difficult to define negligence accurately, and no definition has been adopted that is perfectly satisfactory to all writers on the subject. The one most frequently approved is that of Baron Alderson in Blyth v. Birmingham, 11 Exch. 781, and is as follows:

“The omission to do something which a reasonable man, guided upon those considerations which ordinarily regulate the conduct of human affairs, would do, or doing something which a prudent and reasonable man would not do.” And an action may be brought if thereby mischief is caused to a third party, not intentionally. Mr. Pollock adds to this definition the explanatory clause: “Provided, of course, that the party whose conduct is in question is already in a situation that brings him under the duty of taking care.” Pollock, Torts, 355.

These definitions are often adopted by modern courts, and would, we have no doubt, be sustained against objection. Yet these definitions have been criticised by acute legal analysts, and courts often qualify further by saying that in all cases of injury from alleged absence of care, where an obligation of duty is imposed, the care should depend on some recognized duty, and be commensurate with the risks and dangers of the situation, or state, as did the court here, that such care was such as an ordinarily prudent man would exercise under the same or similar circumstances, which seems to be as far as abstract definitions or illustration ought to go, for, “What is more than these cometh of evil,” and at least are not useful, but liable to mislead.

It follows that the instructions of the trial court in this respect [523]

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.W. 475, 87 Minn. 518, 1902 Minn. LEXIS 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lauritsen-v-american-bridge-co-minn-1902.