Oscar Nordeen, injured while visiting a construction site, appeals a verdict and judgment exonerating the contractor, William Hаmmer-lund, of negligence. The issues are whether the jury should have been advised that Hammerlund's violation of a safety rule was negligence per se and whether the trial court's refusal to advise the jury of the effect of its verdict was error. Because Hammerlund's failure to guard a floor opening with either railings or a cover, contrary to the Wisconsin Administrative Code, was negligence per se and imposed civil liability, failure to so instruct the jury was error. Neither error nor harm resulted from the trial court's refusal to advise the jury that a plaintiff cannot collect damages absent a defendant's causal negligence. We therеfore reverse and remand for a new trial on the issue of liability only.
Nordeen, on a visit to a new home construction site in July, 1981, аnd while conversing with his nephew, Hammerlund, stepped backward into an open basement stairwell. A defense witness testified that а federal Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA) regulation requiring protection of floor openings at construction sites by guardrails or covers did not apply to frequenters. 1 Nordeen requested a jury instruction *167 that Hammerlund's failure to comply was negligence per se. Thе trial court, unconvinced that the OSHA standard applied to frequenters, declined to give the requested instruction. 2
Wisconsin aрplies the provisions of the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 286 (1965) to determine whether a legislative enactment or an аdministrative regulation may be adopted as a standard of conduct in a negligence action.
See Olson v. Ratzel,
*168 It is apparent from the language of the relevant provisions of the Wisconsin Statutes and rules applicable here that the Restatement test has been met. Wis. Admin. Code § Ind 1001.01 (1975) provides: "The purpose of this code is to establish administrative rules whiсh promote the health, safety and welfare of the public, employers and employes and to provide for safe and healthful places of employment." [Emphasis supplied.] Wis. Admin. Code § Ind 1002.01 (1975) provides: "The administrative rules in this code shall apply to thе frequenter, employers, employes and places of employment. . . ." [Emphasis supplied.] Wis. Admin. Code § Ind 1004.01 (1975) provides: "The department shall have the power to create reasonable administrative rules, . . . related to the public, employers, employes аnd places of employment in accordance with section 101.02, Wis. Stats." [Emphasis supplied.]
Section 101.02, Stats., in turn provides in part:
It shall be the duty of the department [DILHR], and it shall have power, jurisdiction and authority:
(15) (h) To ... prescribe ... safeguards ... best adapted to render the employeеs of every employment and place of employment and frequenters of every place of employment safe. ... [Emphasis supplied.]
We note
Walker v. Bignell,
Although the trial court advised the jury of the provisions оf Wisconsin's safe place statute, 3 it let stand the testimony of a defense expert that the safety standard did not apply tо frequenters. We cannot therefore characterize the error as harmless.
Nordeen's request that the court order a new trial on the issue of damages is without merit. During deliberations, the jury inquired of the court whether they could still award damages to Nоrdeen if they found Hammerlund not negligent. The trial court correctly instructed the jury to answer the damage question regardless of how they answered the liability questions.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court has explicitly forbidden trial courts to advise the jury of the effect оf its verdict.
McGowan v. Story,
That part of the judgment dismissing the claim is reversed and the matter remandеd to the trial court for a new trial on the issue of liability only. The verdict as to damages is affirmed.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed in part, reversed in part, and cause remanded with directions. Costs to appellant.
Notes
The trial court refused to strike the testimony as a conсlusion of law, ruling that it was a responsive answer to counsel's cross-examination.
The trial court was not advised that the OSHA standards have been adopted as part of the Wisconsin Administrative Code and that the Wisconsin code protects frequentеrs. The code provisions were first raised in the amicus brief filed with this court by the Wisconsin Academy of Trial Lawyers (WATL).
Wis. Admin. Code § Ind 1926.500(b)(7) and (8) (1975) provides:
(7) Temporary floor openings shall have standard railings.
(8) Floor holes, into which persons can accidentally walk, shall be guarded by either a standard railing with standard toe-board оn all exposed sides, or a floor hole cover of standard strength and construction that is secured against accidental displacement. While the cover is not in place, the floor hole shall be protected by a standard railing.
Wis. Admin. Codе § Ind 1003.01(17) (1975) defines frequenter to "mean and include every person, other than an employe, who may go in or be in a placе of employment or public building under circumstances which render him other than a trespasser."
Where a correct instructiоn on a material point is timely requested and there is evidence to support it, it is error to refuse it unless an equivalent instruction is given.
Sambs v. City of Brookfield,
