185 Iowa 1319 | Iowa | 1919
1. The defendant Martin is the owner of the building known in the record as the Frances building, and defendants Stevens & Company, as architects and engineers, were employed by Mr. Martin to superintend and supervise the construction of the building. They did the work on the commission plan. Defendants commenced the construction of the building in 1911, but at that time, the first story only was constructed. That story was completed, and the furnished store rooms were rented by defendant Martin. One of these rooms was leased to the Gately-Mclntyre Company, which occupied the storeroom as a retail clothing store. Plaintiff was employed in the store. He went to work for the Gately Company six or seven weeks before he was hurt, at which time the canopy was up, and plaintiff knew that the construction work was going on above, and that it was concrete construction work; he knew, also, that the Gately Company was a tenant. The lease provided that the tenant should pay for repairs of all kinds, in connection with said leased premises, and that the owner might, at any time, build the building higher, without the consent of the party of the second part, and without any claim from it.
Plaintiff was injured by falling plastering from the ceiling of the storeroom, caused, as plaintiff alleges, by the negligence of the defendants in allowing water to pass
We do not understand either party to now claim that the ceiling and plastering were improperly constructed, or that improper material was used. The question is as to whether defendants caused or permitted water to impair the plastering, after it was constructed, and during the construction of the floors above.
The building was completed as a one-story building in 1914, and leased to the Gately Company in February,
The structural framework of the building in question, is reinforced concrete, a combination of steel rods with concrete, the last being a mixture of rock, sand, and cement. The first construction work above was to build a protection around the building over the sidewalk, and extending over
• As we view it, this is the turning point in the case, appellants contending that the evidence was insufficient to take this question to the jury, while the plaintiff contends that the. evidence was ample. This fact question as to
The testimony for plaintiff is to the effect that some of the forms were made on the canopy over the sidewalk, and some on a vacant lot near by. A witness testified that he saw these forms erected there, and that they were stuffed with oakum, down at the bottom, just around the bottom.
“Q. What was done, if anything, as to stopping the cracks between the boards, and up and down the cracks of the columns? A. Nothing, that I know of. I saw the forms erected there. Q. When you helped set these columns on the east side, were they caulked at the time you set them up, in the cracks between the boards, — did they have any oakum or anything between them? A. No, sir.”
There is evidence that, when the columns of the second floor were poured, the third floor forms were up, and the concrete was poured off the level of the third floor, into the column forms of the second floor; that, unless these forms were absolutely tight, there would be a volume of water flowing away from the cement when it was poured,—
The plastering that fell and injured plaintiff was an irregularly shaped piece, averaging five or six feet square. After the accident, defendants immediately ordered the plastering taken off all the ceiling of the other first floor stores, as a precaution that similar accidents should not happen elsewhere. In taking it off, the plastering was found loose at different places, in spots from a foot to two or three feet square. Pinch bars and hammers were used to' take the plástering down. To discover the loose places, a hammer was used, and if it was loose, it would sound like hitting a drum. There is no evidence for defendants, as we understand the record, that the forms were caulked prior to the time thev were erected, or as to the placing of
Another sentence in Instruction No. 9 reads, substan
Some other matters are argued; but those discussed in the opinion are controlling. We find no prejudicial error in the record, and the judgment is — Affirmed.