Smith v. H. E. Anning Co.

320 P.2d 42, 156 Cal. App. 2d 842
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 21, 1958
DocketCiv. 17419
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 320 P.2d 42 (Smith v. H. E. Anning Co.) 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
Smith v. H. E. Anning Co., 320 P.2d 42, 156 Cal. App. 2d 842 (Cal. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.

Clarence J. Smith was an employee of the W. B. Baker and Company, a subcontractor installing the air conditioning units in a Stockton high school. This high school consisted of several units. Smith fell through the partially completed roof of the boys’ large gym and suffered severe injuries. He brought this action against H. E. Anning Company, the roofing subcontractor for the gymnasiums and auditorium, and Barrett and Hilp, the general contractor. The jury brought in verdicts for both defendants. Smith appeals.

The plans and specifications called for the use of a one-inch board known as Sonotherm as a base for the roofs of the various gymnasiums. These specifications were approved by the State Division of Architecture. Sonotherm is a fibreboard made of shredded wood and cement compressed into a board one-inch thick. On top of the Sonotherm is a steel frame on which wire mesh is attached, and then gypsum and tar and gravel are poured over it to make the roof. The Sonotherm supports the gypsum mix during the drying period. There was considerable conflict as to the precise color of Sonotherm. One witness testified that it was “light green—gray-green”; another, “gray-brown; it was quite a brown coloring.” The company manufacturing the product described it as having a “neutral gray finish.” Another witness described it as being between black and white, that is, gray with a tinge of blue, while another witness said that it was of a gray concrete color. It is reasonable to infer that in color it somewhat resembled concrete.

Sonotherm is a new process, and had never before been installed by respondent H. E. Anning Company. Several days before the accident to appellant another person had put his foot through the Sonotherm, but the wire mesh caught him so *845 that he did not fall through. Appellant was not so lucky because the wire mesh had not yet been installed in the portion of the roof where he fell.

All of the employees of the H. E. Anning Company were told that Sonotherm would not support the weight of a person and was hazardous, and respondents’ employees told anyone coming near to where they were working of the danger. There were, however, no warning signs on the roof, nor was the roof roped off in any way. Appellant testified that no one warned him about the roof, and there was no evidence to the contrary. The plans and specifications showing the roof construction were available to all subcontractors.

Appellant testified that prior to the accident he had never seen any Sonotherm, and that he had been on the roofs of several of the other buildings involved in the total job and that they were all of concrete.

There is a conflict in the evidence as to whether appellant had any legitimate business on the roof the day he was hurt. The foreman for H. E. Anning Company testified that appellant had no work to perform on the roof. The superintendent for Barrett and Hilp stated that appellant had work to do on many of the roofs, but that he had no work to perform on the boys’ large gym, although he had some work close to it. Appellant testified that he was on the roof to check the ventilator on the roof of the boys’ small gym, * to see if a rigging firm which he had hired had placed blowers on the boys’ shower room which was near the boys’ small gym and the roof of which was some 20 feet lower than the roof on the boys’ large gym. Another reason given by appellant for being on the roof was that he wanted to cheek the ridge of the boys’ large gym because he intended to install, in the future, three blowers on that roof. These three fans were not part of the original contract but were later installed by appellant’s employer pursuant to a separate contract. There is ample corroborating evidence that appellant in fact had discussed these blowers with several people prior to the accident, and they were in fact installed some four to six months after the contract job was completed. Appellant admitted that his employer was not doing any actual work on the roof of the boys’ large gym at the time of the accident.

*846 On the afternoon of March 17, 1950, appellant was on the roof over the choral room, and then proceeded northerly to check several air conditioning units over various rooms. He finally arrived at a 4-foot 6-ineh fire wall adjacent to the roof over the boys ’ large gym. He climbed up on this wall, looked over the roof of the gym, glanced down where he was to step, and slid down on the Sonotherm. The Sonotherm did not sustain his weight and he went right through to the floor of the gym about 40 feet below. He suffered serious and permanent injuries. Appellant testified that there were no boards on the Sonotherm, nor did he observe anyone working on the roof of the gym. He did not see any rails projecting up through the Sonotherm. Appellant admitted that he did not cheek with the roofers to determine whether that particular roof could be walked on. He said that the roof looked like concrete, and that he assumed the work on it had been completed.

The evidence is quite clear that at the time of the accident the Sonotherm had not yet been installed all over the roof of the boys’ gym. Between one-third to two-thirds of that roof had not yet been completed, and was open. There was also evidence that there was a hoist on the center of the roof over the gym, but appellant did not see it. There was also evidence from H. E. Anning Company employees that planks for the workers to walk on had been installed near some of the walls of the gym, but that there were no such planks at the specific spot where appellant fell. The evidence is that the steel rails which the Sonotherm fitted into projected two inches above the Sonotherm and were clearly visible. There was no wire mesh, gypsum or tar paper on the roof when appellant fell.

On this evidence the jury brought in its verdict in favor of both defendants, and plaintiff appeals. He does not question the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the adverse verdicts, but contends that prejudicial error was committed by the giving of certain instructions, and in sustaining objections to some of plaintiff’s evidence.

One of the most serious questions presented revolves around the following instruction proffered by Barrett and Hilp and given, as modified, by the trial court. It reads: “Before the plaintiff may recover in this action against Barrett & Hilp, he must show by a preponderance of the evidence that Barrett & Hilp owed a duty toward him which it failed to discharge, and also the plaintiff himself was free from contributory negligence.”

*847 One of the major issues presented to the jury was whether appellant was guilty of contributory negligence. Appellant contends that, by the above instruction, the jury was told that the burden was on appellant to show by a preponderance of the evidence not only that Barrett and Hilp owed a duty toward him which it failed to discharge, but also that he must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he was free from contributory negligence. Such an instruction, had it been given, would have been clearly erroneous because the burden to show contributory negligence is, of course, on the defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
320 P.2d 42, 156 Cal. App. 2d 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-h-e-anning-co-calctapp-1958.