Young v. Rohrbough

125 N.W. 513, 86 Neb. 279, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 73
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1910
DocketNo. 15,690
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 125 N.W. 513 (Young v. Rohrbough) 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
Young v. Rohrbough, 125 N.W. 513, 86 Neb. 279, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 73 (Neb. 1910).

Opinion

Root, J.

An oral argument has been made by counsel for both parties on defendant’s application for a rehearing. Being more fully advised, we conclude that our judgment should be for the defendant Commercial Building Company. The statement of facts in our first opinion is correct, but will be repeated.

The building in question was constructed by the Rohrbough brothers, Marion G. and George A. The evidence tends to prove that the first and second stories of the structure were constructed for college and office purposes, the third story was designed for lodge and public assembly rooms, and the fourth story for a gymnasium. After the building was completed the Rohrboughs rented [280]*280the third story to a Mr. Baright “to be used for lodge, society, church and other gatherings except public dances, also for office purposes.” The room where Mrs. Young was injured was constructed for lodge purposes, and was sublet by Baright to a Ben -Hur lodge, of which she was a member. Subsequently the Rohrbonghs conveyed the lots and building to the defendant Commercial Building Company, a corporation. We infer, although the evidence is not clear upon that point, that after the last named lease Avas executed the Commercial Building Company rented the attic, or fourth story, to the Y. M. C. A. The Rohrboughs and O. C. Shimer own all of the stock of the defendant corporation, and constitute its board of directors, but the evidence does not show that any one other than the Rohrboughs attended to the business of the corporation. The room under consideration is in the southAvest corner of the building. The fourth floor and the roof of the structure are supported by a series of trusses running east and west. In constructing the east partition of said lodge room, a truss was built north and south in the line of the partition to sustain part of the third floor. One end of the truss was anchored in the south wall of the building, and the north end was supported by a stirrup attached to the lower cord of one of the east and west trusses sustaining the fourth floor and the roof. Studding Avere placed within, and flush with, the frame of the north and south truss, and laths were fastened across the studding and the truss, so that there was no .chance for the plastering to clinch at the points where the laths crossed the surface of the truss.

Plaintiff alleges the building was negligently constructed in many particulars with reference to the plan adopted, the material used, the construction and support of the trusses, and the manner in which the east wall of said room was lathed and plastered. Plaintiff further charges that the fourth story of said building was not constructed, and should not have been used, for a gymnasium; that, when the patrons of the gym[281]*281nasium exercised therein, the building vibrated so as to loosen and eventually dislodge the plastering upon the walls, of said room; that the defendants, with knowledge of the facts, negligently permitted the building to be used as aforesaid, and as a proximate result a quantity of plastering was detached from the east wall of said room and precipitated upon Mrs. Young to her fatal injury.

The court by its sixth instruction informed the jury that if the defendants Bohrbough negligently constructed the building in question, as charged by plaintiff, so that it was dangerous to life or limb of those who might reasonably be expected to occupy it, and such negligence was the proximate cause of Mrs. Young’s death, the jury should find against the Eohrboughs, notwithstanding they had transferred the property before the woman was injured; that the Eohrboughs in this particular should be charged with such knowledge as they had or should have acquired “by the exercise of such care and prudence in the construction of the building and the uses to which it was put as an ordinary, prudent person would have gained under like circumstances and conditions.” In the eighth instruction the jury were further told that if the Eohrboughs as directors of the building company knew, or by the exercise of ordinary prudence ought to have known, the building was in a dangerous and defective condition for the purposes to which it was devoted, and Mrs. Young was injured as a proximate cause of the negligence charged in the petition, they were liable. The court also stated in this instruction: “The said defendants would be charged with such knowledge as they actually had, or should have gained by the exercise of such care and prudence in the maintenance of the building, and the uses to which it was put, as an ordinary, prudent person would have gained under like circumstances and conditions.” Upon these instructions the jury found for the Eohrboughs, judgment was rendered in their favor, and no appeal has been prosecuted [282]*282therefrom. The law of the case respecting the corporation’s liability is stated in the court’s seventh instruction as follows: “With respect to the liability, if any, of the Commercial Building Company, you are instructed that if you believe from the preponderance of the evidence that said building company knew of the defective construction 'of the building with respect to the matters complained of in the petition, or that by the exercise of such care as an ordinary, prudent person would have exercised under the same circumstances, would have known of such defective construction, and knowingly maintained the same, and if you further believe that said building, with respect to the matters complained of, was a menace to life or limb of persons rightfully upon the premises, and if you further find that the plaintiff has established the essential elements necessary to make a case as set out in instruction No. 5, then you should find against the defendant, the Commercial Building Company. * * * Upon the question of the knowledge of the said building company, you are instructed that said building company would be bound by such knowledge as was possessed by its directors or managers, or either of them.”

The evidence tends to prove that the use of the gymnasium caused the ceiling of the lodge room and the building itself to shake and vibrate, and that complaint was made to Marion G-. Rohrbough that the noise created by the use of the gymnasium was obnoxious to the members of the lodge and interfered with the transaction of their business, but there is not a scintilla of evidence that anything was said to the directors of the corporation, or any agent thereof, about the vibrations or the effect of the gymnastic exercises upon the building, or that any agent or representative of the corporation had knowledge of those facts. The directors deny emphatically they had any notice or information that the plastering upon the east wall of the lodge room was in any manner defective, The verdict upon the instructions submitted [283]*283amounts to a finding that the Rohrboughs were not negligent in constructing the building, did not as directors devote it to an improper use, and in the exercise of ordinary care could not have ascertained that the building was defective or dangerous to persons rightfully within the structure. Upon the same evidence the jury has said the corporation defendant is liable, although under the instructions that liability must be established by the knowledge those directors had, or in the exercise of reásonable prudence ought to have acquired, concerning the alleged dangerous conditions either inhering in the building by reason of its construction, or created by the alleged improper use to which it was devoted, its construction being considered.

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Bluebook (online)
125 N.W. 513, 86 Neb. 279, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-rohrbough-neb-1910.