Peterson v. Beck

150 P. 788, 27 Cal. App. 571, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 163
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 8, 1915
DocketCiv. No. 1358.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 150 P. 788 (Peterson v. Beck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peterson v. Beck, 150 P. 788, 27 Cal. App. 571, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 163 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The appeal is from a judgment of nonsuit in an action for damages for the death of the intestate, Albin Peterson. He was killed as the result of a seven-story fall in a light-well of the- Colonial Hotel on Bush Street, San Francisco. He was an experienced journeyman painter and at the time of his death was working for his brother, the respondent, who was a contracting painter. The latter had contracted for the entire job of painting said hotel and the deceased acted as foreman in the work. The management of the job was left entirely in the decedent’s hands. He directed the *572 work of all the men, numbering eight, told them what to do and how to do it and the respondent did not interfere with his control although making suggestions to the foreman as to the easiest way to do portions of the work. The decedent had “the privilege of doing the work as he pleased.” The bath rooms in said hotel were located on an inside light-well. The light-well was five feet long, three feet wide and the only entrances to it were through the doors of the various bath rooms. Over the top of the light-well there was a cover—a skylight fastened down. The ropes used by painters in the familiar apparatus for painting a building are called “falls” and the plank on which the painter sits is lowered or raised by the use of a block and tackle operating each of the “falls.” In the light-well in question, a scantling had to be placed underneath the skylight to support the falls. The top of the light-well was too high to be reached by standing on the window-sill of the bath room on the top floor and the respondent had told the decedent that the easiest way to put the scantling in place was to “stick a ladder through the window” from the window sill to the wall on the opposite side of the light-well. The decedent did not use the ladder but himself selected from the stock of painters’ supplies of the respondent a plank to be taken to the building for the purpose. This was a regular painter’s plank about ten feet long, one inch thick and ten or twelve inches wide. The decedent put some cleats on the plank on which to rest his feet. This plank was used in putting up the scantling and rigging for painting the light-well in which the accident occurred, and another light-well in the building was handled the same way. On the morning of the accident the deceased informed respondent that in placing said scantling he used the plank because the ladder was too wide. Prior to this, respondent did not know that the plank had been so used. • Decedent had not asked respondent, whether he should use the plank, but went ahead and used it, nor did he let respondent know that there would be any further occasion for using the plank.

At the time of the accident, the entire job had been completed and decedent was taking down -the “falls” which had been used in painting said light-well and he was standing on said plank. Decedent had told one of the painters, Carl Wuickboum, to help him take down the falls. To do so they put up the plank, one end resting on the window sill and the *573 other on the opposite side of the light-well. The angle thus formed by the plank was stated by Wuickboum to be about forty-five degrees, although it would appear that the incline must have been steeper than that. Both sashes of the window were then pulled down and the decedent climbed out into the light-well over the top of the window and stepped upon the plank. His helper, Wuickboum, remained in the bath room and took in the slack rope as it was passed to him from the outside. One fall had already been taken down and one block and tackle had been passed to Wuickboum before the accident occurred. Only one man could work on the plank and the decedent did this work without asking any one else to do it. At the time of the accident he was engaged in taking in the second block and tackle. Wuickboum, in the bath room, five or six feet away, could not see the decedent at all, the top sash of the window, as stated, having been pulled down. About ten minutes after decedent had gone out through the window, Wuickboum heard a scream and “a kind of drop” and saw the plank fall off. He ran down stairs and found the decedent at the bottom of the light-well. Wuickboum knew that the plank fell but could not say whether it or the decedent fell first and he did not know how it came to fall. Nothing broke, neither the plank nor any part of the building.

The foregoing, substantially as stated by respondent, is a fair presentation of the facts disclosed by the record.

These salient features, probably, deserve special consideration : 1. The deceased was a man of mature age and for more than twenty-five years he had been engaged in the occupation in which he was employed at the time of his death. 2. The plank which he used was selected and rigged with footholds by him and, with the aid of a helper acting under instructions, placed by him in position. It was not the appliance that respondent had furnished, nor was it the one which respondent had even suggested. 3. There is nothing to show just how the accident happened. We are left to conjecture as to the proximate incidents. It is true that decedent was in a somewhat dangerous position but in view of the evidence no one can say that if he had been careful the accident would have occurred.

With this situation before us we can perceive no ground for holding the defendant legally responsible for the accident.

*574 The particular acts of negligence charged in the complaint are: 1. Failing to provide a safe place of work for decedent ; 2. Providing him with an unsafe, dangerous, and defective appliance to work with; and, 3. Violating an ordinance of the city and county of San Francisco requiring the building of safe scaffolds upon which workmen are compelled to perform their labor.

We agree with respondent that the first of these considerations is not involved at all. The hazard was in the use of the plank placed as has been described. Strictly speaking, this was an 11 appliance ’ ’ rather than 1 ‘ a place to work. ’ ’ The distinction is made clear in the case of Butler v. Townsend, 126 N. Y. 105, [26 N. E. 1017], wherein the plaintiff’s intestate was killed by falling from a scaffold erected as a staging about a vessel for repairing its exterior hull. The court said: “It was a mistake to assume as the duty violated that of providing a safe place for the work of the servants. The staging was not, in the sense of this rule, the place in which the work was to be done, but an appliance or instrumentality by means of or through the aid of which the caulkers were to do their work. . . . The staging, in the present case, was as much an appliance or instrumentality as if it had been, a ladder on some round of which the workman was required to stand in order to do his work, and we shall at least avoid possible confusion if we confine our attention to the exact duty which the master violated if he violated any. ’ ’

But whether the plank be regarded as a place to work or an appliance or instrumentality, the defendant was relieved of all responsibility for its safety by reason of the fact that the decedent selected and adjusted it himself. The principle is aptly stated in Callan v. Bull, 113 Cal. 603, [45 Pac.

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Brown v. Lemon Cove Ditch Co.
171 P. 705 (California Court of Appeal, 1918)
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Bluebook (online)
150 P. 788, 27 Cal. App. 571, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-beck-calctapp-1915.