Stewart v. Toledo Bridge Co.

15 Ohio C.C. 601, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 454
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Ohio C.C. 601 (Stewart v. Toledo Bridge Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Toledo Bridge Co., 15 Ohio C.C. 601, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 454 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Parker, J.:

The plaintiff in error, a minor, about 18 years of ager suing by his next friend, was plaintiff below, and the defendant in error, an incorporated company, was defendant below. Omitting certain introductory and formal allegations of the petition, it reads as follows:

“At the times hereinafter named, plaintiff was in the employ of defendant and under the supervision of its officers and managers.

‘‘Plaintiff was engaged in the occupation of painting on the bridge known as the up-river bridge, and worked upon scaffolding and supports provided and furnished by defendant.

“That by reason of the neglect and carelessness of defendant,it permitted and allowed to be placed into the construction of said bridge, a certain rod of iron which was wholly defective and unsafe,and not fit for use. That while at work upon said scaffolding, which was suspended in part from this defective rod and without any fault or neglect on plaintiff’s part, and without any knowledge on his part of such defect, said defective iron suddenly broke, thus causing plaintiff to fall a long distance, to-wit, thirty-seven and one-half feet,into the Maumee river, and upon logs floating therein, breaking his right leg above the knee and otherwise greatly injuring him and causing him great loss in time and money, and much pain, etc.,’’ for which he asks judgment in an amount named.

The answer denies negligence, and alleges that the plaintiff’s injuries were received through the fault of a fellow-servant and through plaintiff’s contributory negligence.

These allegations of new matter are denied by a reply.

Upon the plaintiff resting his case, the jury was directed' by the court to return a verdict for defendant, which was done. O-n this verdict judgment was rendered, and on account of this action of the court error is prosecuted here.

It will be observed that the petition contains no averment that the defendant had notice of the defect or knowledge [603]*603thereof, or ought to have had; nor do we find any averment that may be regarded as a substitute therefor. The general-charge that “by reason of the neglect and carelessness of : defendant it permitted and allowed” the defective rod to be used in the construction of the bridge, is not sufficient. This-charge of negligence is in the nature of a conclusion. Whether the act was negligent, depends partially at least, upon whether the defendant had knowledge or notice of the • defect or by the exercise of reasonable care ought to have - discovered it. Certain rules upon, this subject are laid down in Wood on the Law of Master and Servant, sec. 414, and" .are quoted with approval by Judge Minshall, in his opinion in Coal & Car Co. v. Norman, 39 Ohio St., 598, a part, of which reads as follows:

“The servant, in order to recover for defects in the appliances of the businesses called on to establish three prop- • ositions: 1st. That the appliance was defective, 2nd. That the master had notice thereof, or knowledge, or ought--, to have had. 3d. That the servant did not know of the defect,and had not equal means of knowing with the master.”"

Then Judge Minshall proceeds to say:

“And it is elementary in the law of pleading, that - whatever a party is required to prove in order to make out.. his claim, must be averred,”

The part lacking in this petition, is that required by the. second rule stated above “That the master had notice-thereof, or knowledge, or ought to have had.” No advantage was taken of this defect in the petition by demurrer or-otherwise, and no objection was interposed to the introduction of any evidence upon the trial on the ground that it. tended to prove this element of notice or knowledge as to-which there was no averment; and therefore, we look farther:into the record to see whether there was any evidence tending to prove this as well as the other facts necessary to be:established by the plaintiff to make out his case.

[604]*604In the consideration of this question, we apply certain rules deduced from the decisions of the Supreme Court of this state, as follows:

That upon a motion to direct a verdict the court is not authorized to weigh the evidence; if there is evidence tending to sustain plaintiff’s case, on all points, no matter how slight, the case must be submitted to the jury; and, for the purpose of the motion,everything is admitted which the evidence in any degree tends to prove,and this involves and includes any and every conclusion which a jury might fairly or reasonably deduce from the evidence,

Now, the evidence in this case discloses that the plaintiff was employed by defendant as one of a gang of painters to paint a certain bridge being erected by defendant over the Maumee river, at Fassett street, Toledo, Ohio. The con.struction of the bridge had been completed about forty-five days before the plaintiff and the other painters with whom he was working had been put to work. In the meantime another gang of painters had covered the bridge with one coat of paint, working upon a swinging scaffold of the same .kind, and fastened to the bridge in the same way as that used by the plaintiff and the gang with which he was at work, and the latter were applying the second coat of paint to the bridge. The frame-work of the bridge was of iron and steel, and there was used in its construction certain steel rods from seven-eighths of an inch to one and one-eighth inches in diameter, and perhaps twenty-five or thirty feet long, which extended across the bridge from side to side obliquely under “T” or “I” beams, upon which the plank floor rested, and these rods passed through and were fastened to certain floor-beams upon which the “I” beams rested, the principal use of such rods being to strengthen the bridge for the resistance of lateral strains produced by wind, the currents of the river, and perhaps other causes. These rods were near to the “I” beams of the bridge, [605]*605within a few inches thereof' — so near that in painting the upper surfaces of the rods where they crossed such beams it was necessary for the painters to hold their brushes horizontally. The staging or swinging scaffold used by the painters consisted of planks extending across the bridge beneath it, and held in position by ropes fastened thereto and to these rods above,and the scaffold was fitted with ropes,pulleys and tackel which admitted of its being raised’ or lowered as occasion should arise in the progress of the work of painting. Two or more of these planks being so fixed in a certain locality, two or more were fastened and swung in the same way at such a distance from the others as would admit of other planks being laid from one to the other, and the latter could be moved along on the frame made by the former to suit the convenience of the painters at their work.

The scaffolding was prepared for the use of several persons, we do not know bow many, but certainly two, if not more, at the same time. While plaintiff was upon this .scaffold in discharge of his duty as an employe of the defendant, one of these rods to which the ropes holding one corner of the scaffold were fastened, suddenly gaveway--broke off---whereby that part of the scaffold on which plaintiff was standing, fell, and he W83 precipitated to the river below, falling upon a raft of logs, breaking his leg and otherwise injuring his person.

Plaintiff was the only person on this part of the scaffold at the time it fell, There seemed to be no unusual strain upon the rod at the time.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio C.C. 601, 8 Ohio Cir. Dec. 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-toledo-bridge-co-ohiocirct-1898.