Seitz v. Pelligreen Construction & Investment Co.

203 S.W. 503, 199 Mo. App. 388, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 82
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 7, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 203 S.W. 503 (Seitz v. Pelligreen Construction & Investment 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
Seitz v. Pelligreen Construction & Investment Co., 203 S.W. 503, 199 Mo. App. 388, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 82 (Mo. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

Action for damages alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff while in the employ of' the defendant.

The petition alleges that defendant was in charge, and in the exclusive control of the erection of a building on Fourth near Vine street, in the city of St. Louis, and’that on or about November 30, 1917, while plaintiff was in the employ of defendant, and doing carpentér work on the third floor of the building, plaintiff was “by reason of the negligence of the defendant, struck by a piece of building, or other, material, with great force and violence, which fell from a floor above the third floor on which plaintiff was working, by reason whereof, and by reason of the negligence of the defendant, the plaintiff fell with great force and violence a distance of about forty feet, from the third floor of said building and to the first floor of said building, and that by reason of being struck as aforesaid, and by reason of falling said distance as aforesaid, which was due to the negligence of the defendant, as aforesaid, plaintiff received the following injuries” (describing them), and alleging that he was permanently injured.

The answer was a general denial.

The trial was before the court and a jury, followed by a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $5000. Filing a motion for new trial as also in arrest, [396]*396and excepting to the overruling of each of these, defendant has duly appealed.

The plaintiff in this case was instructed by his foreman to go on the third floor of the building and take some measurements, and while standing on a girder, using a plumb line to get some timbers straight, he was struck on the head by a piece of falling building material, which plaintiff thought was a board two and a half feet long. He became unconscious and fell from the third floor a distance of about thirty feet, and received the injuries complained of. The building in question was what is known as a slow combustion building, with its interior frame work made both of steel and wood, that is its joists and girders were steel and wood and with columns about fifteen feet apart. The building when completed was to be seven stories high, its exterior walls of brick but at the time of the accident the brick work had only been completed to the fourth floor and the brick masons and hod carriers were working on that floor at the time plaintiff was injured. The girders of the building were laid about sixteen feet apart and joists were laid in between the girders, about four feet apart, on the respective floors. There was an engine and hoists at the rear or east end of the building, on the first floor, used for conveying material up through the building, and on the second floor there were some boards over the engine to protect the engineer below. There was an open space along the north wall of the building, about fifty-one feet from the front, left open to be used as an elevator shaft hut not inclosed or caged in, and the plaintiff was standing south of this when he was struck, this shaft, or space designed for a shaft, being in the same condition as the rest of the. flours; that is, according to the testimony for plaintiff, all open and uncovered, except as to the cover for the engine on the second floor, and scaffold boards on the fourth floor, which, according to the testimony on behalf of plaintiff, covered only about one-fourth of the space of the fourth floor, or so much only as -was needed for the brick layers to put their [397]*397.scaffolds and materials on in the prosecution of the brick work. There also appears to have been runways to run a wheelbarrow over, from one part of these floors to the other when the brick layers were at work. According to the testimony for plaintiff, there had been no permanent floors and no temporary floors laid on either of the floors above, and that evidence tended to show that it was customary in buildings of this kind to either lay a thick permanent floor on each floor as the building progressed, and then lay a thin finished floor over it when the building was nearing completion, or to lay a temporary floor on the respective floors as the building progressed, for the protection of workmen. Neither of these plans, however, according to the testimony for plaintiff, were here pursued. That evidence tended to show that in a building of this kind — a slow combustion building — as it is called, it is not practical to lay the permanent, heavy floor, as the building goes up from floor to floor, as often times it would get wet and expand.. There was also evidence that there was some temporary flooring laid on the joists and girders outside of the covering over the engine on the second floor, and also the scaffold boards on the fourth floor used by brick layers, which, when they were used by the brick layers on a floor, were removed from that floor and taken to the next floor above, on which they would place their trestles and materials.

Plaintiff testified postivelv that on the third, fourth, or fifth floors there was no temporary flooring between the girders, except a plank run, over which to run wheelbarrows, usually three of such runs, one through the center, the others on the sides; nothing else in the rest of the space between the girders, except joists about sixteen feet apart, and eight by fourteen inches, the girders about fourteen inches square, the space between the joists about four feet, two joists between each girder. Plaintiff testified that under the direction of his immediate foreman, he was on the third floor using a plumb line, hanging down over the floor above to get measurements for timbers on which he was working; [398]*398that he was in a stooping position, measuring, when something came down from above and hit Mm on the back of the head.1* It was a piece of wood, he thought, about two feet long. It knocked Mm unconscious and off of the girder. Plaintiff was sure that the object which struck Mm came from the fourth or fifth floor.

On cross-examination plaintiff repeated that he was positive that when he was hurt the brick layers were at work on the west and north walls of the floor above; that there was no covering over the whole of this floor; that he was not sure what hit him; would not say that that made him unconscious at once but was unconscious when he fell, and did not know whether he became so when he was hit or when he hit the first floor; knew he had become so when he hit the first 'floor, or between, and was so when he struck the first floor; was sure that the thing that hit him came from above; saw it before he became unconscious; thinks it was a plank a couple of feet long; had had on a heavy woolen cap and the thing which struck him left no scar, just a sore spot.

There was some corroborative evidence of plaintiff’s testimony, and from even his own witnesses, and from all of defendant’s witnesses, contradictory testimony as to the fact of the floors being covered.

All this testimony as to the covering of the upper floors was objected to by the defendant throughout the whole trial as a matter not covered by the petition, and objection was specifically made on that ground when plaintiff offered and introduced the city ordinance, section 406, Rombauer’s Revised Ordinances of the City of St. Louis 1912, p. 608. That section reads as follows:

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Related

Neal v. Twelfth & Grand Avenue Building Co.
70 S.W.2d 136 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1934)
State ex rel. Pelligreen Construction Co. v. Reynolds
214 S.W. 369 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
203 S.W. 503, 199 Mo. App. 388, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seitz-v-pelligreen-construction-investment-co-moctapp-1918.