187 Ind. 99 | Ind. | 1918
— Appellant prosecutes this appeal'from a judgment rendered against it'for damages recovered by appellee on account of its alleged negligence in constructing a scaffold upon which appellee was working at the time of the accident. The overruling of appel
(2) Does the evidence sustain the verdict? On this question appellant, in effect, takes the position that with appellee’s experience of forty-six years in the work he was doing, if the scaffold was so unsafe, shaky, out of plumb and wabbly, as claimed by the witnesses for appellee, some of whom having so testified from observation, its unsafe condition must have been known to appellee, or at least he could have known it by the'exercise of ordinary care.. Upon this assumption of appellee’s case, appellant has presented an ingenious and persuasive argument, but when analyzed it is based upon open and obvious defects, and the presumption of law — it being conceded that appellee possessed all his senses— that he saw what he could have seen had he looked, citing Baxter v. Lusher (1902), 159 Ind. 881, 385, 65 N. E. 211.
The complaint is under the Five-Man .Act (Acts 1911 p. 145, §8020a et seq. Burns 1914), and alleges that appellant, on February 5, 1914, was the contractor engaged in remodeling, repairing and altering a certain building known as the Robertson Store in South Bend; that for the purpose of, and to be used in, this work, defendant constructed a scaffold and in the building “thereof negligently and carelessly failed to use enough nails and nails of sufficient size and strength and * * * negligently and carelessly failed to brace and construct said scaffold with and out of a sufficient number of timbers, braces, crosspieces, supports, uprights and ledgers, and with timbers, braces, crosspieces, supports, uprights and ledgers of sufficient size and strength, and by reason thereof the said scaffold was weak, defective and unsafe for defendant’s employes to
In this connection appellant also argues that the evidence does not bring appellee within the act on which the complaint is said to rest, for the reason that the evidence shows that he was an independent workman, employing his own helper, and in absolute charge of the work he was doing at the time of the accident; that it' was his duty, under the law, to see that the scaffold was safe, and his failure to do so was a violation of §4 of an act approved March 6, 1911, §3862d Burns 1914, (Acts 1911 p. 597) ; that this act was for the purpose of protecting life, and applied to all persons alike engaged in the erection and alteration of the store front mentioned in the complaint. While on the other hand, appellee insists that he was in the employ of appellant as an ordinary employe, and appellant’s neglect to furnish him a safe scaffold to work on was a violation of §4, supra, and although the danger was apparent, the fact that he continued at work would not be a defense
(3) Appellant complains of seven of the fifteen instructions tendered by appellee and by the court given to the jury. These instructions, when considered in connection with the seventeen instructions given at appellant’s request, fully informed the jury as to the law applicable to this case. They were certainly as favorable to appellant on the question of contributory negligence as it could reasonably expect. We are satisfied that any fairly intelligent jury could not have misunderstood them to appellant’s harm.
(4) Certain instructions tendered by appellant were refused. We have carefully considered these instructions, as well as appellant’s reasons why they should have been given. We cannot agree that reversible error was committed by the refusal of any one or all of these
(5) The verdict was not contrary to law, for the reason that it is supported by the evidence, and not affected by any error of law pointed out as occurring at the trial. Judgment affirmed.
Note. — Reported in 118 N. E. 561. Master and servant: (a) employe’s right of action for employer’s violation of building laws as to scaffolds, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 376; (b) master’s duty to servant in regard to erecting scaffold, Ann. Cas. 1913B 1123, 76 Am. St. 425. Excessiveness of damages for personal injuries other than death, specifically as to injuries impairing the earning capacity of masons, L. R. A. 1915F 153. See under (3, 4) 26 Cyc 1115; (6) 13 Cyc 217.