Rouchene v. Gamble Construction Co.

89 S.W.2d 58, 338 Mo. 123, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 579
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 18, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 89 S.W.2d 58 (Rouchene v. Gamble Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rouchene v. Gamble Construction Co., 89 S.W.2d 58, 338 Mo. 123, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 579 (Mo. 1935).

Opinions

This is an action, by an employee of a subcontractor, against a general contractor for the construction of a building, for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the failure of the general contractor to comply with Section 13275, Revised Statutes 1929. Plaintiff obtained a verdict for $35,000. The trial court ordered a remittitur of $12,500 which was made, and judgment was entered for plaintiff for $22,500. Defendant has appealed from this judgment.

Plaintiff's petition contained several assignments of common-law negligence concerning the safety of his place of work. These, however, were all abandoned and plaintiff submitted his case upon an instruction based solely upon the violation by the general contractor of Section 13275. Defendant contends that the court should have sustained its demurrer to the evidence, saying that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law and that Section 13275 is not applicable to the facts of this case. The evidence viewed from the standpoint most favorable to plaintiff's contentions, as we must consider it in ruling this question, tends to show the facts and circumstances hereinafter stated. Defendant was the general contractor with the owner of the St. Louis Mart Building to construct the superstructure for a large eighteen story building and, "under the terms and plans and specifications the general contractor had to provide the barricades and safeguards." Plaintiff was employed, by defendant's cement work subcontractor, as a concrete finisher. His work on this building was to complete a finished surface over rough concrete floors. This was skilled labor for which plaintiff drew $1.62½ per hour and double time for all overtime. It was shown that plaintiff's earnings had averaged $5000 per year, which would make the Workmen's Compensation Act inapplicable to his case. [Sec. 3305, R.S. 1929.]

On the day plaintiff was injured, he worked on the second floor of the building. He started there about eight o'clock in the morning, working "from the east end — about the middle of the building" and worked there until noon. When he went back in the afternoon, his foreman sent him to the north end of the building to help another finisher named Youngberg "pull a straight-edge." He was injured about one-thirty o'clock, "just a few minutes" after he went to work there. A straight-edge, used for finishing floors, was about six inches wide, two inches thick, and from sixteen to twenty feet long, depending upon the distance between columns. Around openings, a shorter straight-edge was used by one man. Over most of the floor areas, the long straight-edge was pulled by two men. About an inch or an inch and a half of finishing material would be put over a rough concrete floor to be smoothed and shaped by pulling the straight-edge over it. A man would take hold of each end of the long straight-edge *Page 129 with both hands and pull it by walking backward bent down over it. This was hard work, which took strength as well as skill. The men "worked fast all the time" pulling the straight-edge over the finishing material, and at the same time watching the result of their work carefully to see that the floor was leveled up "nice" with "no humps or holes." They "always started at the wall" and "always come backwards." A foreman tells the finishers "where to start from" and "the way we are going," but the men being skilled workmen knew how the work "was to be done." The foreman "watches" their work, however, and "if he wants any change he always tells" them. Since the men had to work fast and "had to watch the straight-edge all the time," they did not have much chance to look back of them as they worked.

Plaintiff and Youngberg started from the north wall and when they had pulled the straight-edge south about fifty feet, plaintiff fell through an opening in the floor about eight feet wide and twelve feet long, which had been provided for a stairway to the first floor. Both plaintiff and Youngberg said they did not see the hole and did not know it was there. Youngberg said he knew about elevator holes but they were located farther back in the building. Youngberg said that when plaintiff fell he was "dumbfounded" and "didn't know what in the world took place." Plaintiff had not worked "right at that place" before lunch, and "had been in that locality just a few minutes." Plaintiff said: "When we work around these kind of buildings, the holes are supposed to be closed up, but we worked fast when we started. We haven't any time to look around for holes." Plaintiff had been working on the building about six weeks. He had not worked on the second floor before but had worked on about seven other floors. He said that "there was pretty fair light;" that "you could see what you were doing;" that there was nothing to prevent him from seeing the hole but he did not see it; that he "looked," when he started back, but "never seen the hole;" and that his foreman did not tell him about it. Youngberg said that he "didn't have any idea of any hole there;" that at the time plaintiff fell he did not see any guard around this hole; but that one was put up the day after the accident. Another witness, who "was a cement finisher following up Rouchene and Youngberg," saw plaintiff fall. He said, "there was no guard around this hole," but one was put up the next day. He also said that "the hole was flush with the floor;" that "if you were . . . thirty feet . . . away from it you wouldn't even know the hole was there;" and that "when you get within twenty feet of the hole the light coming through from the first floor would attract your attention to it."

Defendant's evidence was that they had barricades, around all openings, made by wedging four by four timbers between the ceiling and *Page 130 the floor so that they stood upright at each corner of the opening, and by putting two strands of No. 9 wire (smaller than a pencil in thickness) around them; the first wire would be from two to three feet from the floor and the second about four feet. These barricades would be placed from eighteen inches to six feet back of the opening. The defendant claimed that all openings were thus barricaded; that there were forty holes up to the tenth floor and thirty above, all of which were inspected five times every day; that sometimes contractors would take the barricades down in order to do work near the openings; and that defendant's carpenters would put them up again as soon as they were found. Defendant's evidence also was that there was such a barricade on that day around the hole into which plaintiff fell; that it could not have been pulled down or broken by a man backing into it; that one of the four by fours was found hanging into the opening with the wire attached to it after plaintiff fell; that defendant's carpenter repaired it "the day after the accident;" that one of the men in plaintiff's gang had asked permission of defendant's superintendent to take down this barricade but that this permission had been refused; and that these uprights could only have been removed by knocking them out with a hammer. Cross-examination of one of defendant's witnesses tended to show that sometimes the bottom wires were as high as three feet, and that under such circumstances a man stooped down walking backward could go under it.

Did plaintiff make a case of violation of Section 13275? This section contains the following provision:

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.W.2d 58, 338 Mo. 123, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rouchene-v-gamble-construction-co-mo-1935.