Leine v. Kellerman Contracting Co.

114 S.W. 1147, 134 Mo. App. 557, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 674
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 29, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 114 S.W. 1147 (Leine v. Kellerman Contracting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leine v. Kellerman Contracting Co., 114 S.W. 1147, 134 Mo. App. 557, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 674 (Mo. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

George Leine, a minor who sues by next friend, lost a finger in an accident while he was working on the reconstruction of the building at the southwest corner of Seventh street and Lucas avenue in the city of St. Louis. The building had been divided by partition walls into three distinct tenements, and was undergoing reconstruction so as to make it into one tenement by removing the partition walls and putting in columns and girders in place of them. The building Was seven stories high and toward its southeast corner was an elevator shaft about" nine feet square which ran through all the stories. This opening was to be abandoned for elevator purposes, but was to be enlarged and used for a spiral stairway to run from the basement through the stories. At the time of the accident the shaft had been enlarged accordingly, and was of a size variously estimated by the witnesses at from nine feet in width by twelve to eighteen feet long. The defendant, the Kellerman Construction Company, was contractor for the whole work, and the National Iron Works was subcontractor to' do the structural iron work needed in the reconstruction of the building. Plaintiff was in the employ of the latter company as an iron worker. He was injured in this way: several men with whom he was at work on the first floor, that is, the floor above the basement, were engaged on the day named, in putting in the spiral stairway on that floor, and were, of course, working in and about the opening in the floor through which the stairs were to ascend. At the same time two men in the employ of .defendant company, were at work on the fifth floor placing a girder, which supported the joists, into the south wall of the building. At the time of the accident they were fastening an iron plate in the wall to hold up the girder. A scaffold had been constructed on. the fifth floor six feet high above the floor, five or six feet long and two and one-half or three feet wide. The two men were standing on the scaffold adjusting the iron plate, when a movement of [561]*561one of them brought Ms foot into contact with a heavy piece of pine timber two feet long and three or four inches thick, which lay on the scaffold. The force with which the foot of the workman struck the block, threw it off the scaffold and it fell on end, rebounded and pitched down the opening prepared for the' stairway. When it reached the first floor plaintiff was at work on the stairway which already came that far up from the basement through the opening in the floor. At the instant when the billet of wood reached the first floor in its descent, plaintiff was stooping over working with a lever and his left hand was resting flat on the top of an “I” beam. The piece of wood struck this hand and cut off the forefinger. The present action was instituted to recover damages for the injury, the petition alleging the accident was due to the neglect of the defendant to keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition, or exercise care in the progress of the work to protect employees and persons on the premises. The particular breach of duty charged was omitting to cover or guard the stairway opening so as to prevent material from falling down it from the floors above and injuring workmen who were engaged below. Another act -of negligence was charged in the petition, but the case was submitted to the jury only on the one stated. The answer was a general denial. A verdict was returned for plaintiff for $1,700, and judgment having been entered for said sum, this appeal was taken.

Complaint is made of the refusal of the trial court to direct a verdict for defendant, of the admission of certain testimony and of an instruction given in behalf of plaintiff.

It is insisted no negligence was established because the accident was one which could not have been.anticipated and, therefore, defendant was under no duty to guard against it. In support of this proposition it is said the scaffold on which the men were at work on the [562]*562fifth floor, was so far from the opening of the stairway, it would, not have occurred to a person of ordinary foresight that the piece of timber which fell might be knocked off the scaffolding, descend through the opening and hurt workmen below. This argument is fallacious in two respects: it restricts the duty of defendant in too narrow an orbit, and assumes the testimony was uniform about the distance of the scaffold from the opening. If it was defendant’s duty to cover the aperture in the floor, or guard it by putting boards around it or in some other way, the extent of the duty was to protect workmen below not only from injury by the piece of timber that fell, but from injury by the fall of any material which happened to be above; and whether defendant was under the duty to afford such protection, depended on whether there was enough probability of something falling down the opening and hurting a workman below, to suggest to a contractor of ordinary prudence the necessity of taking precautions. [16 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), pp. 486, 487; Graney v. Railroad, 140 Mo. 89, 98; Hoeffer v. Hotel Co., 142 Mo. 378, 388.] Testimony which tended to prove the opening of the shaft ought to have been covered, was elicited by defendant’s cross-examination of one of the men who was working on the scaffold on the fifth floor. This witness was asked if, considering the fact that he and his coworker were engaged eight or ten feet from the shaft, the opening should have been closed according to custom. He answered that as “everything was kind of shaky around there anyhow, and it was an old building,” he judged the opening ought to have been closed; saying, further, “there was more or less stuff laying around, pieces of brick and one thing and another”; that there were probably some timbers and bricks on the floor which had been taken out of the hole where the girder went into the wall. " It is contended the rubbish had all been removed from the various floors; but said witness testified it had not been, but that loose material [563]*563which was liable to fall down the shaft and do harm was still in the building. While most of the evidence is uniform that the scaffold was about eight feet from the shaft, a witness for plaintiff, Kinworthy, swore the carpenters on the fifth floor were at work a foot or two from the opening and that the scaffold was two feet from it. It is true he said he did not make a close estimate but just guessed; still, he said that from where he was working on the first floor with plaintiff, he could plainly see the two carpenters on the scaffold on the fifth floor; that he could see all the way to the fifth floor and back as much as eight feet from the opening. The man who knocked the timber off the scaffold was put on the stand by defendant. He said when the timber fell from the scaffold, it hit right on the edge of the hole in the fifth floor and slipped off. He said again it struck on end a second time and then fell into the hole. Considerable testimony was given tending to prove it was customary and proper, under the circumstances narrated, to cover or otherwise guard such openings in order to protect men who were working below from falling material. This court is pressed earnestly to say there was no evidence of negligence, because an injury of the kind could not be foreseen.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 S.W. 1147, 134 Mo. App. 557, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leine-v-kellerman-contracting-co-moctapp-1908.