DocketNumber: No. 40077.
Judges: Barrett, Bohling, Westhues
Filed Date: 10/13/1947
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
On September 5, 1945, Myrtle Stubblefield and her husband were walking on Broadway near Locust, in St. Louis, when a wooden wedge, 8 7/8 inches long and weighing about three and one half ounces, fell approximately 100 feet from near the top of the Federal Reserve Bank Building and struck her on the head and shoulder. To recover for her resulting injuries Mrs. Stubblefield instituted this action for damages against the Federal Reserve Bank, the owner of the building, Fruin-Colnon Contracting Company, a general contractor, and St. Louis Contracting Company and Swift Roofing Company, subcontractors. At the close of the evidence the trial court indicated that a verdict would be directed as to Swift Roofing Company and Mrs. Stubblefield took an involuntary nonsuit as to that defendant. Upon the submission of the cause the jury returned a verdict in favor of the three other defendants. The trial court granted the plaintiff a new trial as to the owner of the building, the Federal Reserve Bank, and as to the general contractor, Fruin-Colnon but refused to grant a new trial as to the two subcontractors. Upon this appeal Mrs. Stubblefield contends that she was entitled to a new trial as to all the defendants and the Federal Reserve Bank and Fruin-Colnon, upon their appeals, contend that the trial court was in error in granting a new trial as to them. The two subcontractors contend that the judgment should be affirmed as to them, in any event.
No written contracts were offered in evidence but it was stipulated and admitted that Fruin-Colnon Contracting Company, as a general contractor had entered into an agreement with the Federal Reserve Bank, as the owner, to make certain alterations on the building and to construct an addition to the building. It was also agreed that St. Louis Contracting Company had a subcontract to do certain stonework and that Swift Roofing Company had a subcontract to do the roofing work. As to the fall of the wooden wedge the plaintiff *Page 1023 pleaded, in her petition, "That defendants negligently and carelessly supervised and performed said repair work to said stone cornice along and upon the roof of said building at the eaves thereof, fronting said public sidewalk, and negligently and carelessly permitted said large solid wooden wedge, . . . to be thrown, or fall, or drop, and to strike and injure plaintiff as aforesaid, and negligently and carelessly failed to erect any barrier or guard over or upon the entire length of said public sidewalk fronting said building, and negligently and carelessly failed to give any notice or warning to persons lawfully upon and using said public sidewalk . . . that there was danger in walking and traveling thereon from falling building and repair materials and debris, particularly said described solid wooden wedge, . . ." Liability against the three defendants was hypothesized upon a finding that the wooden wedge fell and struck the plaintiff while work was being done around the roof and stone cornice and "that defendants failed to erect any barrier, guard or covering over said sidewalk or failed to give any notice or warning to persons using said sidewalk that there was danger in walking thereon from falling building and repair materials . . ."
Upon Mrs. Stubblefield's appeal against all the defendants the substantial question is whether she was entitled to submit her cause upon the mere circumstance of the falling of the wooden wedge — res ipsa loquitur. The trial court was of the view that she had pleaded specific negligence and in effect, therefore, compelled her to accordingly [720] submit her cause. The appellant points to the unexplained fall of the wedge and insists that the mere fact of its fall was such circumstantial evidence of negligence that she was entitled to have her cause submitted upon a finding of that fact alone.
[1] Had the plaintiff pleaded and relied upon the mere circumstance of the fall of the wedge there could not be the slightest doubt but that she would have presented a typical res ipsa loquitur situation. Kelly v. Laclede Real Estate
Investment Co.,
[2] But even so the further insuperable difficulty with the plaintiff's contention on this appeal is that she not only pleaded specific negligence but in addition proved it and if she is not precluded by her pleading from relying upon res ipsa loquitur she is certainly precluded by her proof. Powell v. St. Jos. Ry. L.H. P. Co.,
[3] The plaintiff's claim that she is entitled to a new trial as to the St. Louis Contracting Company and the Swift Roofing Company as well as against the owner of the building and the general contractor is connected, for the most part, with her contention that she was entitled to a res ipsa loquitur submission [721] of her case. She contends, *Page 1025 in that connection, that the enforced submission of specific negligence led to a confusion and contradiction in the instructions and an absurd result. But we are not faced with the problem of deciding whether the plaintiff would be entitled to a new trial as to all the defendants if she were entitled to a res ipsa loquitur submission of her case.
The only instruction offered on behalf of the St. Louis Contracting Company was on the burden of proof. The owner and general contractor offered instructions hypothesizing the St. Louis Contracting Company's negligence as the sole cause of the incident and injuries complained of. Its liability, as we have said, was hypothesized upon a finding of the fall of the wedge, the failure to erect a guard or barrier and failure to warn of the danger. There was evidence from which the jury could have found that the St. Louis Contracting Company was resetting the stone cornice and that while it was doing so the wedge fell and injured the plaintiff because of the company's negligence in the respects pleaded and submitted. There was also evidence from which the jury could have found that the plaintiff had not sustained an injury as a result of the wedge hitting her. But, in any event, the plaintiff's charges of negligence and of injury were denied and the defendant was entitled to have the jury pass upon the credibility of her evidence and she is concluded by the jury's finding against her as to the St. Louis Contracting Company. Cluck v. Abe,
[4] As to the Swift Roofing Company (a partnership), the admission was that they had a contract to repair and replace the roof. The general contractor's superintendent testified that on the day in question employees of the St. Louis Contracting Company were working on the building and were on the roof. As the wedge fell and hit the plaintiff four or five men were seen leaning over the roof. But there was no evidence from which the jury could find that any Swift Roofing Company employees had anything to do with the negligence and injuries complained of or even that any such employees were on the roof that day. There was evidence that one of Swift's trucks was parked on the Locust Street side of the building but there was no circumstance from which the jury could find that they were on the roof or had anything to do with the fall of the wedge. There was no proof therefore that Swift Roofing Company had anything to do with the instrumentalities producing the injury or that they were negligent in any manner and the court properly directed a verdict in their favor. Streicher v. Mercantile Trust Co. (Mo.), 62 S.W.2d 461; Pietraschke v. Pollnow (Mo. App.), 147 *Page 1026
1026 S.W.2d 167; Luettecke v. St. Louis,
[5] The trial court granted the plaintiff a new trial as to the owner of the building, the Federal Reserve Bank, and the general contractor, Fruin-Colnon Contracting Company, upon the specified ground that error had been committed in giving their instructions numbered three and four. In this connection the plaintiff contends that it was also error to have given instructions six and eight. Instructions three and six relieved these two defendants of liability if the jury found that the negligence of the St. Louis Contracting Company was the sole cause of the plaintiff's injuries. Instructions four and eight told the jury that they could not find a verdict for the plaintiff from the mere fact of her injury and concluded by instructing that they could not find for the plaintiff and against these two defendants unless they found that plaintiff's injury "was caused as the result of negligence on the part of said defendant(s) . . ." Upon the appeals of the owner and the general contractor it is urged that these instructions were harmless, if error, and in any event that the jury ignored them. The essence of their appeals, however, is that as owner and general contractor they are not liable for the tortious conduct of their subcontractor, St. Louis Contracting Company. [722] They contend that it is an admitted, incontrovertible fact that they had a contract with an independent subcontractor, that the fall of the wooden wedge was the result of negligence on the part of the independent contractor's employees, that the work was not inherently dangerous and therefore there was no primary obligation on the part of the owner and general contractor to erect barricades or warn pedestrians of the danger of falling materials. Press v. Penny Gentles,
No one would question the owner's and general contractor's position in general. As an exception to the principle of respondeat superior "the employer of an independent contractor is not subject to liability for bodily harm caused to another by a tortious act or omission of the contractor or his servants." 2 Restatement, Torts, Sec. 409. The doctrine is analyzed and the cases applying the rule are collected in the annotation in 18 A.L.R. 801. Aside from the fact that there has long been a tendency to abridge the employer's immunity in such cases (18 A.L.R., l.c. 836), there are certain instances in which the rule is not applicable in any event. Annotations 21 A.L.R. 1229; 23 A.L.R. 984; 115 A.L.R. 965. One of the well-recognized exceptions to the rule contended for by these two defendant-appellants is that, "One who employs an independent contractor to do work, which the employer should recognize as necessarily requiring the creation during its progress of a condition involving a peculiar risk of bodily harm to others unless special precautions are taken, is subject to liability for bodily harm caused to them by the *Page 1027 failure of the contractor to exercise reasonable care to take such precautions." 2 Restatement, Torts, Secs. 413, 416. If the circumstances fall within this rule a primary, non-delegable duty is imposed upon the employer — or here upon the owner and general contractor and they may not escape that duty or responsibility upon the plea of independent contractor. Annotations 23 A.L.R. 984; 115 A.L.R., l.c. 977.
For example in Privitt v. Jewell (Mo. App.), 225 S.W. 127, the wall of a building in process of construction fell and the court said, l.c. 128: "The erection of the building produced a situation of inherent danger to the public passing on the sidewalk, dangers that could reasonably be anticipated by defendants as being likely to result in injury, if proper precautions were not taken, either by erecting guards or barriers or building a covering over the sidewalk. The duty of using reasonable care to protect the public from injury was a primary obligation resting upon the defendants, which they could not escape by letting the contract for the building to some one else." In Neal v. 12th Grand Ave. Bldg. Co., supra, the court held that the fall of the stick and the unprotected walk constituted negligence and involved inherent danger and the owner could not escape responsibility upon the plea of independent contractor. In Loth v. Columbia Theatre Co.,
This is not to say that the appellant-defendants may not be entitled to a properly drafted and applicable instruction to the effect that a verdict could not be found upon the mere fact of the plaintiff's having been injured. Palmer v. Hygrade Water
Soda Co.,
None of the assignments of error being well-taken, the judgment is affirmed and remanded. Westhues and Bohling, CC., concur.
Palmer v. Hygrade Water & Soda Co. ( 1941 )
Neal v. Twelfth & Grand Avenue Building Co. ( 1934 )
Conduitt v. Trentonton Gas & Electric Co. ( 1930 )
Pandjiris v. Oliver Cadillac Co. ( 1936 )
Kean v. Smith-Reis Piano Co. ( 1921 )
Berry v. Kansas City Public Service Co. ( 1938 )