178 Pa. 397 | Pa. | 1896
Opinion by
It was the duty of the defendant to erect a suitable scaffold on which the plaintiff could properly and safely perform the work he was sent to do, and the first question to be considered in the case is whether this duty was discharged. The plaintiff submitted evidence tending to show that it was not, and that the neglect to discharge it was the cause of his fall. A part of this evidence was descriptive of the manner in which scaffolds were usually constructed for the performance of such work as the plaintiff was required to do and was to the effect that scaffolds so constructed were safe. It was also to the effect that a scaffold constructed as the plaintiff and his witnesses testified the one in question was, was unsafe. This branch of the plaintiff’s contention was answered by the defendant with evidence showing that the scaffold was constructed precisely as the plaintiff’s experts testified it should have been in order to make it secure and a proper place for the performance of the work. It will thus be seen that the parties agreed as to what should have been done by the defendant, and disagreed as to what was done by him. If, therefore, the plaintiff’s evidence on this point was believed it established the charge of negligence, and if the defendant’s evidence was credited there should have been a verdict in his favor. It was not possible to reconcile the con
The plaintiff also testified that he heard Krimmel complain to the defendant on Saturday that the scaffold was not “ in the way it should be; that there was something loose; it might cause an accident,” and the defendant replied that he was very sorry. This was all he heard the defendant say in regard to the complaint made by Krimmel, and the latter never claimed to him, until after his fall, that the defendant promised to repair the scaffold, or said that it should be attended to. It is plain therefore that the plaintiff was not induced to go upon the scaffold Monday morning by anything said to him or in his presence by the defendant or by Krimmel, his fellow workman.
Judgment reversed.