| Wis. | May 20, 1890

OetoN, J.

Tbe defendant was building a brick block, and employed tbe plaintiff and other brick-masons to lay tbe brick, and certain carpenters to do tbe wood-work. It became necessary to build a scaffold on which tbe plaintiff and another mason could stand to lay brick, and two of tbe carpenters, under a foreman, built tbe scaffold in some baste, as tbe masons were waiting for it. Tbe plaintiff stood by and saw tbe work on tbe scaffold done, or at least tbe finishing part of it. There was testimony tbat tbe carpenters bad prepared a brace to be placed in the middle of it, and which they thought was necessary to make tbe scaffold safe, and were about to put it in, when tbe plaintiff told them not to do so, as it would be in bis way, and if they put it in *11be should have to take it out, and that the scaffold was all right without it. There was also testimony that a felloe-workman, on the scaffold with the plaintiff, knocked off with a hammer a stay-brace at some other part of the scaffold, and that these defects caused the scaffold to fall, and that it fell soon after the said stay was removed. There was some evidence tending to show that the scaffold wa,s overloaded with brick. After working on this platform three or four hours, it fell and carried with it the plaintiff, his fellow-workman, and an attendant, and injured the plaintiff very seriously.

The jury found a verdict for the defendant. On this appeal from the judgment the learned counsel of the appellant assigns several errors of law, which will be disposed of in their order.

1. It seems that the foreman of the carpenters who put up the scaffold made a model of it, and such model was used by the witnesses of the defendant to- illustrate to the jury how it was constructed. There was testimony that it was a correct model of the scaffold, but this was disputed by the plaintiff. It was not formally introduced in evidence, but the jury were allowed to take it to their room. This is assigned as error. The model became a necessary part of the witnesses’ testimony, to go to the jury as such. It was ,not used as independent testimony of the real construction of the scaffold, but only to explain the testimony of the witnesses. This court very recently decided that an unrecorded plat of lots might be used in the same way, and might be formally introduced in evidence, and used by counsel on the argument. Meinzer v. Racine, 74 Wis. 166" court="Wis." date_filed="1889-04-25" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/meinzer-v-city-of-racine-8183105?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="8183105">74 Wis. 166. The model so used and taken by the jury was only to show what the witness testified to, and would not corroborate the testimony in the least. It would be like a pencil drawing made by a witness on the stand, in the presence of the jury, to illustrate or explain Ms oral evidence. The use of the *12model in- this way seems to have been proper. See the authorities cited in the above case.

2. Tbe witness Horde, the foreman, testified that when, they were about to put in that brace the plaintiff said: “Wo use putting in that, because, if he put it in, they would taJce it out; no need of it; was in their wcuy.” The witness added: My men told me he [plaintiff] said so.” The plaintiff’s counsel moved that the above testimony of the witness be stricken out as hearsay, and the court denied the motion. This testimony was explained as follows: The witness Horde did not understand English, and, when the plaintiff said this to them,— that is, to the witness and two other persons who were making the scaffold,— he asked one of the others what he said, and he translated it to him as above, in the presence of the plaintiff. It follows, then, that the plaintiff said this to Horde through an interpreter. When so translated, the plaintiff tacitly assented to its correctness. It was no more hearsay than any evidence given through an interpreter.

3. The court instructed the jury, in effect, that if any of those working on the scaffold with the plaintiff, negligently overloaded the scaffold with brick, which caused it to fall, it would be the negligence of a fellow-employee, for which the plaintiff could not recover of the defendant. This is claimed to he erroneous, and the learned counsel of the appellant cites authorities which show that the fact that some one else besides the defendant contributed to produce the injury would not be a defense. But in all such cases the person who thus contributes is a stranger, not connected with the plaintiff as a fellow-servant or co-employee, as in Atkinson v. Goodrich Transp. Co. 60 Wis. 141" court="Wis." date_filed="1884-03-18" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/atkinson-v-goodrich-transportation-co-6604359?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6604359">60 Wis. 141. The persons working on the scaffold were the plaintiff, another brick-mason, a carrier of brick, and a carrier of mortar, engaged in the same work and employed by the same person. There can be no question but that they were co-employees, and, if the plaintiff was injured through their negligence, the de*13fendant is not responsible to the plaintiff for it. This has been too often decided by this court to require authorities. The court stated hypothetically the facts which would make them co-employees, and then stated the law applicable to such facts correctly.

4. The court, in instructing the jury, said: “ The' testimony tended to show that there were two hundred bricks or upwards on the scaffold.” This was not erroneous, as claimed by the counsel. • There was testimony that there were from 200 to 250 bricks On the scaffold when it fell, and that such a number was not necessary.

5. The learned counsel asked the court to instruct the jury that “ a mere suggestion of the plaintiff that he thought the middle brace was not needed would not excuse the defendant for not putting the same in its place, if it was necessary to make the scaffold safe.” This instruction was refused, and very properly, for it was not applicable to the case made by the evidence. The plaintiff did not make a mere suggestion that it was not needed, but he told the carpenters not to put it in, and that if they did he would take it out, and that it would be in his way, etc.

There are some other exceptions to the instructions on the ground that the court misstated the evidence to the jury. The court in every instance stated only that the defendant claimed the evidence to be so, or that it tended to prove certain facts, or if they should so find,— the common form of instructions. They do not seem to be liable to the criticisms made on them. The verdict seems to be sustained by the evidence, and it does not appear that the court committed any errors of law on the trial. ■

By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

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