Johnnie W. Killian, a common laborer employed by a general contractor, was injured when he stepped from a ladder into a pile of metal duct woi'k on the basement floor of a house under construction. According to Killian the pieces of tin were left at the foot of the ladder by a tinner era-' *761 ployed by a subcontractor, Wheeloc Engineering Company, who had the contract to install the furnace and duct work. In his suit against the subcontractor for negligent injury a jury returned a general verdict in his favor and fixed his damages at $29,-■000. The trial court sustained the defendant subcontractor’s motion for a new trial upon specified grounds IS, 19, 20 and 21 and granted a new trial upon all issues. Killian has appealed and contends that the ■order granting a new trial is not sustainable upon any of the four grounds, or, if it is that a new trial should be limited to the issue of damages only. On the other hand, the respondent contends that the plaintiff did not make a submissible case, that he was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law and in any event that the trial •court appropriately granted a new trial for the specified reasons and for many other reasons as well.
The subcontractor’s contention that plaintiff failed to make a submissible case is threefold: first, that he had to rely on circumstantial evidence and it is urged that the necessary facts to support the verdict may not be inferred without resort to conjecture and mere speculation; second, that he is conclusively bound by the testimony of •defendant’s tinner, called as a plaintiff’s witness, that the tinner did not leave or stack the sheet metal near the bottom of the ladder, and third, that he failed to look “as he stepped off the ladder” and is therefore guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.
The tinner, and he was the only tinner on “the(se) jobs,” did say that he did not “at any time on that job stack any pipe in front of a ladder in the basement of any of those homes.” However, he was the tinner who installed all of the furnace and duct work for the defendant in a “whole flock of houses” and some of his duct work was “right where the stairway comes out.” While all of the furnace work was a “pattern job” and the duct work was prefabricated at specified lengths and sizes and supposed to fit, there were short length pieces of tin and it was necessary to cut some of the pipe to the registers, “they have to be cut on the one side.” And, it is the custom of the trade (one of the defendant’s points in the trial) as it is with plumbers and electricians, when they “make a fitting,” to “drop them and leave them lie” and it is the duty of the general contractor’s laborers to clean up “the trim and the scrap.” In the house in which the plaintiff was injured the stairway had not been installed and the only entrance to the basement was a temporary “homemade ladder” from the first floor.
Killian had been in the basement the day before, Wednesday afternoon, and the tin-ner was then engaged in installing the duct work for the furnace along the west wall and no other work was then being done in the basement. The next day, April 17, 1958, shortly after eight o’clock, he returned to the basement to see how much cement would be needed to fill an open space between the basement wall and the floor joist and the same tinner was installing duct work in the northwest corner. On that trip Killian did not see pieces of metal around the ladder. When he left the basement his foreman asked him to perform some task in another house and when he returned about an hour and a half later with his bucket of cement he says that he looked or “glanced down in the basement and I didn’t see anything.” He then proceeded down the ladder backwards, the bucket of cement in his right hand, and as he got to the bottom of the ladder “I started to step off as I half-turned I saw the metal, I jumped to miss it and I struck my right leg in it.” Later he said that he looked before he started down the ladder and saw nothing on the floor, but “as I partially turned to make my step off the ladder, I saw it,” he had released his “hold” and “I started to push myself — my left foot was still on the ladder — to shove myself to miss the metal.” On cross-examination he said that there was “a round pile” of metal and debris two or three feet square, one-half to one foot back from the ladder. He could not say exactly what was *762 in the pile of debris and he could not precisely describe the pieces, but he said that there was some sheet metal and duct work, some round pieces and one “shirred piece” and it was “Round furnace ducting they put the heating in and square.”
Thus, plainly, there was testimony other than the tinner’s that pieces of furnace ducting had been left on the floor near the foot of the ladder and the plaintiff was not conclusively bound by the tinner’s testimony that he had not “stacked” any furnace material near the ladder. Lay v. McGrane, (Mo.)
As for the court’s order granting a new trial, we are not concerned here, as the appellant indicates, with whether the $29,000 verdict is excessive, or with whether there is evidence to support the award, or, had the trial court ordered a remittitur, with whether there is substantial support for the remittitur. The trial court sustained the motion for a new trial on specifications 15, 19, 20 and 21, the last two grounds are that (a) the verdict of the jury is the result of bias, passion and prejudice on the part of the jury and (b) the verdict of the jury is so excessive as to indicate bias, passion and prejudice on the part of the jury in favor
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of plaintiff and against defendant. These are discretionary grounds for granting a new trial and the problem here is whether, viewing the record favorably to the court’s views, there is evidentiary support for the ruling. Stith v. St. Louis Public Service Co.,
An order granting a new trial on all issues, rather than on damages alone, is also reviewable for an abuse of discretion only. Annotation
In this view of the appeal it is not necessary for this court to consider the correctness of instructions and numerous other matters raised by the respondent. For the reasons indicated the order is affirmed and the cause remanded.
PER CURIAM.
The foregoing opinion by BARRETT, C., is adopted as the opinion of the Court.
All concur.
