Simon v. Omaha Public Power District

202 N.W.2d 157, 189 Neb. 183, 1972 Neb. LEXIS 690
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1972
Docket38307
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 202 N.W.2d 157 (Simon v. Omaha Public Power District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simon v. Omaha Public Power District, 202 N.W.2d 157, 189 Neb. 183, 1972 Neb. LEXIS 690 (Neb. 1972).

Opinions

White, C. J.

This is an appeal from a jury verdict and a money judgment for the plaintiff, Albert Simon, in a negligence action for personal injuries against the defendants, Omaha Public Power District and Gibbs, Hill, Durham & Richardson, Inc., who are architects and supervisors of the construction for the defendant, Omaha Public Power District. Another defendant, Natkin & Company, for whom Simon was working was impleaded as the plaintiff’s employer for the assertion of its workmen’s compensation subrogation rights, and both Omaha Public Power District and Gibbs cross-petitioned against Natkin for indemnity as to any amounts adjudged against them in favor of Simon. The jury returned a verdict for Natkin on both indemnity claims, from which finding the Omaha Public Power District and Gibbs, Hill, Durham & Richardson, Inc., appeal. We affirm [186]*186the judgment of the district court.

Plaintiff Simon, working as a steamfitter for Natkin, was seriously injured when he fell through an opening in the floor deck of a building under construction known as Unit No. 5 in OPPD’s expansion of the North Omaha Power Plant. OPPD was the owner of the premises and its own general contractor. Gibbs, Hill, Durham & Richardson, Inc., hereinafter referred to as GHDR was the consulting engineer and architect engaged by OPPD. The various assignments of error raised by OPPD and GHDR assert, in substance, that the trial court should have sustained their motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the grounds of the insufficiency of the evidence and that there was error in the instructions to the jury.

Boiled down, the contentions of OPPD and GHDR require a determination by this court as to the following:

(1) What was the duty or standard of care owed by them to Simon;
(2) With relation to the instructions to the jury, what was the effect of safety standards which were introduced at trial and based on expert testimony that they were recognized by the construction industry, OPPD and GHDR, and incorporated into regulations issued by the Nebraska Department of Labor; and
(3) The effect of deposition testimony by Simon that was contradictory of his trial testimony as to lookout and knowledge regarding the opening through which he fell.

It is necessary for an understanding of the precise issues presented that a comprehensive and detailed statement of the facts be given.

In 1964 OPPD engaged GHDR to act as consulting engineer in construction of a new generator addition to the North Omaha Power Plant. In their contract, GHDR made the following promises, among others, as regards their undertakings:

[187]*187“We will manage and supervise the entire construction including: .

“1. Overall planning and management of the construction work and building operations will be furnished in addition to coordinating, scheduling, and expediting the work of the various contractors, handling incidental field engineering, and performing all managerial functions incident to the over-all construction work as contrasted to the work of specific contracts.
“2. Inspect field work performed by various contractors to determine acceptability of the work. This service will include the necessary checking to insure compliance with the plans and specifications and to protect the District’s interest in safety, housekeeping, fire prevention, and operation of the running plant.” OPPD, however, reserved the right to control all phases of the work and to decide all matters pertaining to schedules, policy, and selection of key personnel of GHDR.
The conduct of GHDR under this contract is illustrated through the testimony of Mr. Donald Rutland, the construction superintendent for GHDR who was at the jobsite daily from September 1965 to July 1968. OPPD apparently relied on GHDR for the performance of all safety responsibilities as OPPD had no safety people on the job. In addition, Mr. Devereux, a State inspector, thought that Mr. Rutland worked for OPPD. Mr. Devereux’s dealings were with Mr. Rutland, despite the fart that Mr. Ted Short, the OPPD liaison man at the site, was known by Mr. Devereux as the “over-all head of everything there.”

Mr. Rutland made twice-daily safety inspections of the site. Mr. Rutland had men who very definitely undertook portions of the job of safety enforcement relative to his inspections, but GHDR had no one whose job was strictly safety enforcement. Neither OPPD nor GHDR had any craftsmen that could be put to work to cover a hole or opening discovered on inspection. [188]*188Mr. Rutland would direct one of the several contractors to build a cover. If possible, Mr. Rutland tried to find the contractor whose equipment was going to be installed in the hole, unless it was an emergency.

In the months prior to Simon’s fall, Mr. Rutland acknowledged having received many complaints of open, unguarded holes from the State labor inspectors. Four inspection reports were received in evidence. Each reads the same as to item No. 10: “Are all elevators, shafts, and openings properly guarded? No.” At no time did Mr. Rutland reject the receipt of these complaints or indicate that this was, not his department. The six or seven contractors on the job were not cooperative respecting the complaints, and between the official complaints and Mr. Rutland’s inspections the situation was recognized by Mr. Rutland as very serious. In fact, the situation was serious enough that a State inspector on February 7, 1967, was considering a shutdown of the site.

In this situation Mr. Rutland’s response was only to continue the regular weekly safety meetings. These meetings had been initiated at the beginning of construction and continued until completion.

On February 9, 1967, Simon fell through a duct opening on the first floor. He was impaled on three one-foot, vertical, reenforcing rods of steel set in concrete on the ground floor directly underneath the duct opening. These rods were designed to form part of the foundation upon which a machine was eventually to rest. The rods, installed by a contractor other than Natkin, had existed for at least a year prior to the injury, and had never been boxed.

The dimensions of the duct opening were 3% feet by 3% feet. It had been created a long time prior to the date of injury, by a contractor other than Natkin, who had been awarded a contract for heavy piping. It was surrounded by an elevated flange to a height of approximately 4 inches.

[189]*189The following facts might reasonably have been found by the jury from the evidence presented. The duct opening was located 3 feet south of a very large condenser opening which was surrounded by a guardrail. Slightly farther away and to the west a lube-tank opening, 7% by 17 feet, was covered with planks overlaid with plywood. Adjoining it on the west was a large pipe hatch enclosed -with a guardrail. There was no artificial lighting but the floor was adequately lighted by the absence of the north wall. The lighting around the duct opening was adequate but not so good as at adjoining places. In the words of a steamfitter who was with Simon at the time of the accident, “your eyes would probably take a little bit to get used to the different lighting there.”

Simon, age 60 at the time of trial in July 1971, testified he had completed the tenth grade in school.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
202 N.W.2d 157, 189 Neb. 183, 1972 Neb. LEXIS 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simon-v-omaha-public-power-district-neb-1972.