Parker v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co.

348 So. 2d 91, 1977 La. App. LEXIS 4193
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 31, 1977
DocketNo. 7293
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 348 So. 2d 91 (Parker v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co., 348 So. 2d 91, 1977 La. App. LEXIS 4193 (La. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

LEMMON, Judge.

In this tort action plaintiff, who was injured when he fell through a hole in a scaffold while working on a building construction site for B. E. King & Sons, Inc., a plastering sub-contractor, sought to recover damages against defendant B & R Masonry Company, Inc., the masonry sub-contractor who owned the scaffold. Plaintiffs suit was dismissed after a trial on the merits on the basis that “plaintiff has failed to prove, by any preponderance of evidence, that any board was removed by any agent or employee of B & R Masonry . . . .” The principal issue on appeal is the sufficiency of plaintiffs proof on this point.

I

At the time of the accident work was in progress topping off the wall of a 35-foot high building.

In the subcontracting schedule of this particular phase of construction the bricklayers completed the concrete block wall; then the carpenters attached wood strips to the masonry; then the lathers nailed laths (sheets of wire mesh) to the wood strips; and finally the plasters completed the exterior finish. King, whose plastering subcontract included the lathing work, had used a power-operated “swinging stage” scaffold for earlier work on this job. However, on the day plaintiff was injured, he was working with express or implied permission on B & R’s scaffold, which was designed for masonry work.1

The two-level masonry scaffold consisted of a series of upright metal towers, eight feet apart, with scaffold boards (2 x 10-inch planks) laid horizontally across the tower’s crossarms. The lower level, two boards wide and adjacent to the building, was the level where the bricklayers worked. The upper level, seven boards wide and 20 inches higher, served two functions. Masonry mix and blocks were placed on the inner side of the upper level, within reach of the bricklayers, while hod carriers (masonry laborers) used the outer side of the upper level to transport additional materials by wheelbarrow.

Most of the scaffold boards were 16 feet long, but between the points where towers extended through the scaffold’s upper level, there were shorter scaffold boards {Th feet long) specially cut to fit between the towers.2 The hole through which plaintiff fell was between two towers, where one of the short scaffold boards was missing.3

When the lathing crew used the masonry scaffold, the lathers worked from the upper level (on the third row of boards), moving from left to right while nailing the 27-inch wide laths to the wood strips. As plaintiff moved in this fashion facing the wall, and because the tower protruding several feet into the air obstructed his view of the hole as he moved to his right, plaintiff never saw the hole until he fell through it as he turned and stepped to reach for materials, which were lying on the scaffold boards behind him and to his left.

[94]*94II

Nothing in the record even suggests any inherent defect in the scaffold. Thus, plaintiff’s case in negligence is based on a hazard created by the removal of one or several boards.4 Since the owner of the scaffold with no inherent defects ordinarily would not be deemed negligent when a hazard is created by removal of a board by a third person without the owner’s knowledge, plaintiff’s claim against B & R based on negligence depends upon proof that B & R’s employee or agent removed the board or that some other related act or omission by B & R contributed in some manner to causation of the accident.

III

Plaintiff attempted, by use of both direct and circumstantial evidence, to prove that one of B & R’s employees removed the board in the area through which plaintiff fell.

The direct evidence was the deposition testimony of B & R’s former bricklayer foreman, Merle Hancock, who stated that a B & R labor foreman, Joe Gaines, said after the accident that he (Gaines) had “taken a plank from there to use on another scaffold”.5 At trial Gaines denied removing a board from the scaffold and denied telling Hancock he had removed a board. Thus, there was a conflict in the testimony as to whether Gaines removed the board, and while an admission by an employee of the defendant is strong evidence against the defendant, we would not reverse on the sole basis of this disputed admission.

However, the circumstantial evidence strongly indicates that a B & R employee removed the board.

B & R’s work had progressed from left to right along the outer wall of the building, and as B & R and the carpenters (employees of the general contractor who customarily used B & R’s scaffold on that job) completed their work in a given area, B & R’s laborers dismantled the scaffold on the left end and added on to the scaffold at the right end, where work was yet to be done.

It is undisputed that in the pertinent area of time B & R’s employees were dismantling the section of scaffold at the left end. The carpenters finished their work on the scaffold on the day before the accident. Moreover, B & R’s president admitted “(o)ne of the scaffold we were in the process of stripping off”. And King’s lather foreman testified without contradiction that on the afternoon before the accident he and plaintiff had walked the entire length of the scaffold, marking off the places for expansion joints, and had seen several boards missing but only at the left end of the scaffold where B & R’s men were moving boards to set up the scaffold at the other end.

Since B & R was dismantling the scaffold on the day before the accident, the most reasonable inference is that B & R’s employees removed the several boards missing from the scaffold. Except for the carpenters, only King and B & R had employees (King had three or four, and B & R had 20) on the scaffold in that area of time, and the carpenters had completed their work in the area on the day before the accident. King’s employees had no reason to remove scaffold boards, since they were using the scaffold which had been set up earlier to accommodate B & R’s employees and the carpenters. On the other hand, B & R’s employees at the time were in fact dismantling one end of the scaffold and adding on to the other end in order to perform bricklaying work there. There was also other testimony that B & R had scaffold towers at another point on the construction job.6

[95]*95The only suggestion that the board was removed for some other reason was testimony by a B & R laborer that on the morning of the accident he saw three men on the scaffold take a board out of the scaffold in order to pull laths through with a rope and hook. He stated he watched this for over two hours before the accident, but didn’t see any men on the ground (where the witness was) hooking up the materials, and that the men on the scaffold on about four occasions during that period pulled up three or four pieces at a time through the same hole.

The laborer’s testimony was contradicted by all King employees, who testified that laborers hoisted the materials by pulley or by use of the swinging stage onto the roof in large bundles before the lathers began hanging the laths, and that the materials were later handed off the roof, several pieces at a time, to lathers on the scaffold who stacked them at various points along the wall before starting to hang them.

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348 So. 2d 91, 1977 La. App. LEXIS 4193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-state-farm-fire-casualty-co-lactapp-1977.