31 A.2d 504 | Pa. | 1943
William S. Miller Company was the general contractor erecting a school building; Clement Martin, Inc. was a subcontractor for the work of bricklaying; Guy Giordano, plaintiff, was a cement finisher employed by Pittsburgh Ply-Rite Company, a subcontractor for the waterproofing. One morning while plaintiff was standing on a scaffold applying waterproofing to a wall, the scaffold being about five feet above the floor of what was to be the basement of the school, he was injured by the fall of a stone, 20 x 40 x 8 inches and weighing from 200 to 300 pounds, which became dislodged from the corner of what at that stage of the construction was the top course of the outer wall of the building some 25 to 30 feet above the scaffold on which plaintiff was working.
The stone that fell had been laid the day before by William S. Miller Company. It was the duty of Clement Martin, Inc. to back the stone veneer with brickwork. Plaintiff's helper, William Conrad, who was working a few feet from him, looked up immediately upon hearing the crash and saw a colored man in a crouched position, about eight feet from the place from which the stone had fallen and holding in his hands, as though in the act of lifting it, a 16-foot plank, 12 inches wide and 1 1/2 or 2 inches thick, "the end of the plank" being "right where *63 the stone was missing." The man whom he thus observed was in the employ of Clement Martin, Inc. and acting at the time in the course of his employment.1 Conrad testified that there was not "any other person about there besides this negro."
Plaintiff brought an action to recover damages against William S. Miller Company and Clement Martin, Inc. The court granted a nonsuit as to both defendants.
We cannot agree with the view taken by the court that there was not sufficient evidence from which a jury could find that the negro did anything that caused the accident and therefore any verdict by the jury to that effect would necessarily be based upon mere conjecture. It is true that the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur does not apply, nor, indeed, is it invoked by plaintiff's counsel. The case is not one of presuming negligence from the happening of the accident, but of inferring negligence from the circumstances from which it apparently arose (Pope v. Reading Co.,
While no two accident cases are exactly alike, verdicts for plaintiffs were sustained in circumstances not essentially dissimilar to those here present in Booth v. Dorsey,
No evidence of negligence was presented against the general contractor, William S. Miller Company, and plaintiff admits that even if such negligence were established he could not recover from that defendant (Swartz v. Conradis,
The order of the court overruling plaintiff's motion to remove the compulsory nonsuits is affirmed as to defendant William S. Miller Company and reversed as to defendant Clement Martin, Inc., with a procedendo.