120 Minn. 108 | Minn. | 1912
In this action for wrongful death the administratrix recovered the full amount permitted by the statute. The defendant Wells Brothers Company appeals from the order denying its blended motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or a new trial.
There is very little conflict as to the facts in this case. The J. B. Watkins Medical Company, one of the original defendants, caused to be constructed on its premises in Winona a substantial business block or building. It let the contract for its construction to the defendant
In the erection of the wall Lowrie & Son, by their stonesetters, would set a course of this veneer, followed by the bricklayers of Wells Brothers Company, who would fill in with brick and lime and cement mortar to the top of the stone course and anchor that to the brick. Each stone had two holes cut in the upper edge close to the side next to the brick, and an inch wide groove, not so deep as the holes, from these to the brick backing. To hold the stones secure in the wall there were provided so-called anchors, 8 or 10 inches long and an inch wide, of quarter-inch steel or iron, with a one-inch bent at one end to fit into this hole in the stone, and the other end bent the same way, only the hook a little longer, to pass over the brick and imbed in the mortar, thus making, with the mortar between the brick and stone, a solid wall of masonry. The anchors were furnished by Lowrie & Son, but were placed and imbedded in the mortar by the bricklayers.
When it came to the cornice, we find that the plans called for, first, a course of stone 1 foot 3½ inches in height and projecting 4½ inches beyond the stone course below it; the next course consisted of stones 1 foot 7 inches in height, projecting 7½ inches beyond the first course; the third course was 9 inches in height, and projected over the second course 9 inches; the fourth course was 9 inches in height, and projected over the third course 6 inches; the fifth course, called the ashlar, 2
This cornice had been fully completed to and including this third course, and the anchors driven into the brick wall. Whether the stone-setters or bricklayers had driven these in does not appear. On the day previous to the accident the stones on the fourth course had all, or nearly all, been set. There is some dispute as to how many, if any, were lacking. One, or, as some claim, two or three, of the ashlar stones had also been set. But the bricklayers were engaged upon other parts of the building, and had not backed this fourth course, or begun to do so.
About 8:30 in the morning of August 30, while the stonesetter was engaged in setting, either one of the stones lacking in the fourth
Plaintiff, Pelowski’s widow, as administratrix, brought this action against the J. E. Watkins Medical Company and Wells Brothers Company for damages for the wrongful death of her intestate, setting up the contract relation between the two defendants, that the defendant Wells Brothers Company employed Lowrie & Son to set the stone in the walls, that said Lowrie & Son and said Wells Brothers Company did erect and construct the walls and cornices, that in the work Lowrie & Son were subject to the directions and under the control of the defendants, that defendants failed to supervise and control the erection of the walls and cornices, but they allowed the walls and cornices to be laid and constructed in a negligent and unsafe manner, and that while Paul Pelowski was at work for Lowrie & Son near the north wall of the building, the cornice, because of defendant’s negligence in allowing the wall and cornice to be constructed in a negligent and unsafe way, fell and killed Pelowski. When plaintiff rested, the case was dismissed as to defendant J. E. Watkins Medical Company on its motion. At the close of the evidence the defendant Wells Brothers Company moved for a directed verdict. The motion was denied, and the case submitted to the jury. Under the direction of the court, the jury, in addition to the general verdict, was required to answer certain questions. These questions and answers are as follows:
Question: “Were the stonesetters guilty of negligence in setting or anchoring the stone in the cornice which fell?” Answer: “No.”
Question: “Was the defendant Wells Brothers Company negligent in the execution of its part in the construction of the cornice which fell ?” Answer: “Yes.”
Question: “If you answer ‘yes’ to question No. 4 [preceding question], then state in what particular defendant Wells Brothers Com
Question: “If you find Wells Brothers Company was negligent, was such negligence a proximate cause of the accident resulting in the death of plaintiff’s husband ?” Answer: “Tes.”
Upon this appeal the amount of the verdict is not assailed, nor are any rulings of the trial court upon the submission or exclusion of evidence. The errors assigned relate to defendant’s right to an instructed verdict, to the contention that the verdict is perverse, and should not be permitted to stand, and to alleged errors in the instructions to the jury and refusal to give one requested by defendant.
In determining whether or not defendant was entitled to a directed verdict, consideration must be given to the position Wells Brothers Company occupied in the construction of the wall and cornice. The plans called for a wall with cornice of one solid piece of masonry, save where openings were provided for windows and doors. The outside veneer of stone was to be joined to the brick inside in the process of erection, so as to make the wall an integral mass. The defendant reserved to itself the placing of the brick in the wall, and did join or anchor the stone veneer to it. Necessarily the stone was set before the brick to which it should’be joined could be laid. And when it came to the cornice, where each course of stone was to project outside of the one below it, it must be apparent that the safety of the structure suggested the necessity of immediately following up with the brick course and anchoring it securely to the stone. It may be that the laying of the whole fourth course of the stone in the cornice without the brick-backing would not have caused the fall, and that this attempt to place some of the ashlar stones was the straw that broke the camel’s back; but there is also ample evidence in the record to sustain the finding of the jury that the accident would not have happened if this fourth course had been backed with brick and anchored. The question is not so much what particular act caused the cornice to fall as this: Did any duty rest on defendant, by virtue of its contract with the subcontractor, or from the position it took in erecting the
It is clear that as to such persons, if injured by a fall of this wall, a prima facie case is made out by proof that the wall fell, that injury resulted therefrom, and that defendant was taking part in its construction. That some one else was also doing part, or at fault in the doing thereof, would not excuse defendant from responsibility for the joint enterprise. But there is an additional reason in the relation existing between defendant and Lowrie & Son. The defendant, in its’ contract with Eeed Stone Company, under whom Lowrie & Son were employed, very properly inserted this provision:
“The subcontractor will commence work immediately upon notice so to do, proceed with- the said work and every part thereof in a prompt and diligent manner, prosecuting the several parts-thereof at such time and in such order as the general contractor may direct, and will progress its work with the other works of the building and sufficiently in advance of them so as not to delay the progress of the construction of the building.”
Under the provision quoted Wells Brothers Company had the undoubted right to stop the setting of the stone till it had opportunity to lay the brick and properly anchor and join thereto the stone already set. And we think that under this reserved right, as well as because the wall and cornice were the joint product of defendant and Lowrie & Son, there rested a duty on both to see to it that it was so erected as not to endanger the life of one who might be on the street below. The defendant was not entitled to a directed verdict. As to the construction of contracts with similar provisions, see Carlton County Farmers Ins. Co. v. Foley Brothers, 117 Minn. 59, 134 N. W. 309, 38 L.R.A.(N.S.) 175.
Because the jury found that the stonesetters were not negligent in setting or anchoring the stone in the cornice which fell, counsel for defendant contends that the general verdict and the special findings that defendant was negligent in failing to brick-back and anchor the stones in the fourth course, and that such negligence was the proxi
Furthermore, the record sustains the trial court’s view that there was evidence to submit to the jury from which it could be found that the wall and cornice were constructed as to the stonesetting under defendant’s direction, even if the express terms of the contract pursuant to which the work was done be construed as not so providing. The defendant had its superintendent continually on the work, who says, with reference to these very stones in the fourth and fifth courses, that it was his duty to observe when and how they were laid, that he did so do, and that when the stonesetter placed the next to the last ashlar stone hoisted to the cornice prior to the accident temporarily in a position to endanger the wall, he at once directed a different handling thereof, which direction was immediately complied with, thus showing that directions were given by defendant as to the manner of doing the work by the stonesetters, and that the latter understood their duty to follow such directions.
Although the jury in the special finding pointed out that one physical cause for the fall of the cornice was the lack of brick-backing and anchorage for the fourth course thereof, it does not therefore necessarily follow that the proposition submitted to them in the general charge, whether the defendant assumed such position toward the stonesetters that thereby it could be guilty of negligence as to the time and manner in which the entire construction of the walls and cornice proceeded, was not also resolvéd in plaintiff’s favor. The defendant ought not to be in a position to take advantage of rulings too favorable to it on matters affecting the duty of Lowrie & Son as to anchoring the stone veneer to the brick. Without reference to the contract, the evidence is all one way that the stonesetters provided the short anchors, and made holes and grooves for their reception in the stones, but that the bricklayers invariably set and imbedded these in the wall, so as to make a unit of the stone and brick.
From what is already said, it is apparent that we do not consider it was error for the court to refuse defendant’s request to instruct the jury that it was not responsible for the manner of fitting or setting the fourth and fifth courses of cornice stone, nor in the charge that, if the negligence of both defendant and the stonesetters concurred as the
By the contract with the owner, the defendant Wells Brothers Company undertook to see that the construction of the building was done properly, and with the Heed Stone Company for the stonework it stipulated that the subcontractor shall sufficiently perform, furnish, and finish the work in a thorough and workmanlike manner under the direction and to the satisfaction of the general contractor and architect. Under this provision, and the one hereinbefore referred to, it may be that the trial court placed a too limited construction upon the authority of the contractor over the subcontractor; but in this defendant is not prejudiced. However, we think the contract stipulations, and the actual manner of constructing the wall and comice by defendant and the subcontractors, justified the instruction to the effect that, if the work in the construction of the wall and cornice was done under the direction of Wells Brothers Company as to means and methods of doing it, the company must exercise ordinary care to see that the same was reasonably safe.
One instruction is criticised because it. submitted to the jury whether there was negligence on the part of defendant in incorporating into the wall any defective stonesetting which caused the fall. The court could not assume that the jury might find no negligence in this regard, and, further, if it be true, as defendant claims, that the only negligent proximate cause found by the jury was the failure to incorporate the fourth cornice course of the stone into the structure, it is hard to perceive how defendant could have been prejudiced by the instruction given. The court also gave an instruction to the effect that Wells Brothers Company had engaged to erect the building for the owner, and, in so doing, to see to it that the materials used by the Heed Stone Company were suitable and proper, and that the work performed by that company was workmanlike, and if defendant negligently failed to exercise care in this respect in regard to this wall
The other challenged portions of a charge eminently fair, exhaustive, and fully guarding the rights of defendant, we deem so clearly right that we shall notyliscuss them.
The. order appealed from is affirmed.
On January 24, 1913, the following order was filed:
In the opinion an incident in regard to the temporary placing of an ashlar stone so as to endanger the wall is erroneously stated as having been observed and corrected by the superintendent of' the defendant contractor, whereas it was done by the superintendent of the architect and defendant owner. The deduction to be drawn from this mistaken premise is not of sufficient materiality to change the result, or warrant a reargument of the case, and the application is therefore denied.
[See modification on page 118, infra.]