Nauman v. Harold K. Beecher & Associates

467 P.2d 610, 24 Utah 2d 172, 1970 Utah LEXIS 623
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1970
Docket11579
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 467 P.2d 610 (Nauman v. Harold K. Beecher & Associates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nauman v. Harold K. Beecher & Associates, 467 P.2d 610, 24 Utah 2d 172, 1970 Utah LEXIS 623 (Utah 1970).

Opinions

SHEYA, District Judge.

This case was before this Court on a prior appeal from a dismissal of plaintiff’s second amended complaint. The purpose of that appeal was to determine whether said complaint stated a cause of action against the defendant corporate architect and another architect. Briefly, it alleged the defendants were under contract to supervise construction of the Salt Lake City-County Complex; that on October 17, 1963, at the construction site of the east-west utility tunnel which was part of said contract, a cave-in occurred, causing plaintiff’s injuries; that said tunnel was dangerous and unsafe; that the excavation did not comply with state safety regulations; that the defendants knew of such dangerous condition for many days prior to the accident, and negligently failed to shut down the work, although defendants had the authority and duty to do so.

We held that plaintiff’s complaint stated a cause of action against the defendant corporate architect.1 After remand a trial was had to the District Court, sitting without a jury. Judgment was awarded to plaintiff. Defendant appeals.

The material facts are: Salt Lake City and Salt Lake County on March 1, 1960, entered into separate but similar contracts with defendant whereby the latter agreed to plan, design and supervise construction of the present Metropolitan Hall of Justice Complex in Salt Lake City, Utah.

The contract provided, in part, that defendant shall furnish certain architect’s services, and also a qualified on-site inspector, one of whose duties was to super[174]*174vise and inspect all phases of the work being done; that the city engineer shall represent the City, and the architect shall perform all required services under his direction and supervision.

Defendant prepared specifications pursuant to said agreement, containing a general contract between the public bodies and Christiansen Brothers, Inc., the general contractor. The pertinent parts thereof are hereinafter set forth.

In Paragraph 19 of said general contract it was provided that the contractor was to comply with all Federal and State laws that in any manner affected his operation under the contract.

The “special conditions” of the specifications provided that the contractor shall take all necessary precautions for the safety of the public and employees on the work and shall comply with all applicable Federal, State and municipal safety laws and building codes to prevent accident or injury to persons on * * * the premises where the work is being performed; and required the contractor to provide and be responsible for all temporary shoring needed for executing and protecting the work.

One part of this construction project included the excavation of an east-west utility tunnel about nine hundred feet long extending from the Hall of Justice building to the old City-County building to bring heat from the new boiler room to the old building.

Defendant drew plans and specifications for the tunnel, showing the location, dimensions and the materials to be used therein. The method, means and how the excavation was to be constructed, were left to the general contractor. The excavation on the tunnel was to be commenced about September 1, 1963.

Defendant employed Johnathan H. Tucker as an on-site inspector for the entire Hall of Justice Complex, covering about eleven acres of construction work. The public bodies employed a project representative named Harry F. Butcher. Wally Christiansen was the project manager for Christiansen Brothers, the general contractor of the project. He will hereafter be referred to as “Wally” and Christiansen Brothers will be hereafter referred to as the “contractor.”

Tucker and Butcher complained to Wally or to Rolf Christiansen almost constantly from the start of the excavation about lack of shoring or sloping of the walls of the tunnel and other safety violations. Tucker also complained, at defendant’s request, to the Industrial Commission about the middle of September 1963, concerning said violations. In response, John Holmes, a state safety inspector, first arrived on the job to inspect it on September 16, 1963. He also inspected it on September [175]*17517, 18, and October 4, 1963. On September 16th Holmes found unsafe conditions existed near the sidewalk east of the old City-County building and not where the cave-in occurred. Holmes gave orders to the contractor to shore up and to “live up to state regulations.” On September 18th, shoring was being done on the east side of the sidewalk, which appeared ample and proper. No work was being done in the tunnel on October 4th.

The trial court having found for the plaintiff upon our review we must survey the evidence in the light most favorable thereto to determine whether there is substantial evidence to support the findings; or, to state it conversely, if there is no reasonable basis in the evidence to support the findings, they cannot be sustained.2

The numerous complaints made to the contractor by both Tucker and Butcher, and the complaints to Mr. Holmes, all culminated in a meeting about September 25, 1963 between Beecher, representing defendant architect, Wally Christiansen, representing the contractor, Butcher and others representing the City. The then foreman for the contractor, George Knight, was apparently inexperienced in excavation work and had not been following good construction practices. The employment of a new foreman was discussed. Beecher said, “We have got to get a new foreman.” Wally approved, and also agreed to stop the work on the utility tunnel until 4ie could obtain a competent and safe foreman, and not because of any existing unsafe conditions.

The work was thereafter shut down from about September 27, 1963 to October 16, 1963. In the meantime the plaintiff, Arthur O. Nauman, was named by the contractor as its new foreman. He had been an employee of the contractor for about ten years, (four years as a foreman), and had been in the construction industry seventeen years. Wally told plaintiff at the time the latter started work that this portion of the work had been stopped because the prior foreman had not competently and safely directed the work. Plaintiff, in testifying as to his prior experience, stated he had worked in an excavation about eighteen feet deep but mostly smaller ones; that he had worked on a number of important projects, including the University of Utah Medical Center and the Boy Scout Building, both in Salt Lake City.

The contractor notified Beecher that plaintiff was a safe and competent foreman and was to take charge of the utility tunnel. Nauman commenced work as foreman on October 16, 1963. During the two weeks that work on the excavation had been stopped, the contractor had backfilled [176]*176the excavation to about one hundred feet west of Second East Street, and the excavation was being cleaned out by Evan Ashby, the dragline operator, who also sloped the banks thereof in order that plaintiff could start work on the tunnel when he came on the job.

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Nauman v. Harold K. Beecher & Associates
467 P.2d 610 (Utah Supreme Court, 1970)

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Bluebook (online)
467 P.2d 610, 24 Utah 2d 172, 1970 Utah LEXIS 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nauman-v-harold-k-beecher-associates-utah-1970.