126 Va. 72 | Va. | 1919
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
John P. Pettyjohn & Sons contracted with the owners to build an addition to Hotel Roanoke, in the city of Roanoke. They employed the Roanoke Sheet Metal Company, as a subcontractor, to do the plumbing on the addition, and the plaintiff was an employee of this subcontractor. In the course of the construction of the building the defendants, who were doing the carpenter’s work themselves, erected a scaffold along the face of the south gable of the building for the purpose of enabling their workmen to “case” certain window-frames in the gable and to put the cornices thereon. This work had been completed, but the scaffold had not been taken down. The work for which the scaffold was primarily designed did not require the workmen to go beyond the west face of the last window on the west from which the support for the scaffold projected. The supports for the scaffold upon which the floor of the scaffold rested are spoken of by the witnesses as “pudlocks.” They were 2xl2-inch joists, set on edge, run out of the window, and nailed at the other end to uprights run from the scaffold below. The floor of the scaffold consisted of loose
The declaration alleged negligence on the part of the plaintiffs in error (1) in the use of defective materials, (2) in the failure to nail the floor of the scaffold, and (3) in the failure properly to construct and brace the scaffold. The first two of these allegations were abandoned at the hearing in this court. The plaintiffs in error defended on the ground that they had not been guilty of any negligence in the construction of the scaffold, and, if they had, the defendant in error was a mere licensee who took things as he found them, and they did not owe him the duty of making the scaffold safe for the use made of it by him.
D. P. McCann: “Q. In a case of that kind, where a contractor has entered into a contract to do work ór erect a building, and a subcontractor contracts with him to do the
“A. We always use the scaffolds for executing the work that were there.”
D. E. Argenbright: “Q. What is the custom and what is in contemplation by the parties as to the erection and use of scaffolding in cases of that kind?” This question was. objected to, but the objection was overruled. The examination then proceeded.
“A. Most of the work we do is specification work; we work under specifications.
“Q. I asked you what is contemplated by the parties and what is the custom in regard to the use of the scaffolds ?
“A. The general contractors generally build the scaffolds or does the scaffolding work.”
In Smith v. Trimble (1901), 111 Ky. 861, 64 S. W. 915, a paper-hanger was injured by stepping onto a balcony leading from an upper porch to an adjacent room, when the balcony fell, precipitating him to the ground. It was not necessary to use this balcony in going to or from the rooms upon which he was at work, but he did use it, without the knowledge or consent of the appellee, for his (appellant’s) greater convenience in calling to a fellow-workman below. The court said: “We are of opinion, and so hold, that the appellant, while engaged in that work, was using such parts of the appellee’s premises as were reasonably necessary to enable him tó do his work, was on the premises, under the assurance, in law, by appellee that such parts so necessarily used were reasonably safe for the purpose of such use. But beyond that appellee owed appellant no duty greater than to a stranger or trespasser * * * and when appellant,
In Hutchinson v. Cleveland Cliff Co. (1905), 141 Mich. 346, 104 N. W. 698, the plaintiff was employed to cover pipes in the defendant’s mill, and fell through an open, unguarded hatchway.' His work did not call him nearer than within twenty to forty feet of the hatchway, and he had to step over a steam pipe a foot high from the floor to get there. He had no call to go there and no invitation. His excuse for going there is that it was near night, and he wished to ask the foreman whether he should mix another quantity of plastic. He had seen the foreman go in a northwesterly direction from him and disappear from his sight around a still, a few feet from him. The mill was in operation and was lighted by electricity. Plaintiff testified that the light was .dim. He started in the same direction and went around the still, ultimately walking into.the trap, which he did not see or notice. The railing had been removed to facilitate the raising of the cumbrous machinery. The foreman was not produced as a witness. It was defendant’s contention that it owed no duty to plaintiff, who had not been invited to enter that portion of the mill, and that he was guilty of contributory negligence. It was held that the defendant owed him no duty of protection.
In Vaughan v. Transit Development Co. (1917), 222 N. Y. 79, 118 N. E. 219, the plaintiff was a motorman. of the defendant company. He went into the toilet-room of one of the company’s power plants, as had been the custom of himself and other employees of the defendant for years,
In Ryan v. Toop, 99 N. Y. S. 590, 114 App. Div. 165, a subcontractor for the plastering in the building in process of construction ordered his servant to plaster along a stairway, and he attempted to do so by standing on iron treads on the stairs, which treads were not built or intended to work on, but were to serve merely as a sheathing for stone treads. One of the treads gave way and the plaintiff was injured. • It was held that the contractor was not liable, as the plaintiff was not there by invitation.
In Holbrook v. Aldrich, 168 Mass. 15, 46 N. E. 115, 36 L. R. A. 493, 60 Am. St. Rep. 364, the plaintiff, a child under seven years of age, entered defendant’s shop with her father, who was going to make a purchase. She intended to buy some candy, but in the first place accompanied her father to a part of the shop some distance from the candy counter, and went to the coffee-grinder. He let go her hand to get his money and she went over to the coffee-grinder, put her hand up the spout, out of which the ground coffee came, hoping to get some whole kernels, and lost her fingers. It was held that the defendant was under no obligation to look out for the child and to. see that it did not injure itself by
In Maguire v. Magee (Penn. 1888), 13 Atl. 561, Magee was contractor for all the walls, brick work, etc., and had charge of the scaffolding. The residue of the work was done by the owners. All of the workmen, whether employed by Magee or the owners, used the scaffolds to pass from one part of the building to the other. Magee was a laborer, employed by the owners of the building and not by the contractor, and was engaged in painting the crib work on the building. While working on the scaffold he stepped on what proved to be a trap in the scaffold and fell and was injured. The court held that there could be no recovery against the contractor; that the plaintiff was a bare licensee; that the scaffold was of temporary character, and that the defendant did not owe him the duty of having it in a safe condition for his use.
See also Plummer v. Bill, 156 Mass. 426, 31 N. E. 128, 32 Am. St. Rep. 463; Kidder v. Sadler, 117 Me. 194, 103 Atl. 159; Blackstone v. Chelmsford Foundry Co., 170 Mass. 321, 49 N. E. 635; Eldred v. Mackie, 178 Mass. 1, 59 N. E. 673.
We are of opinion that Basham, the defendant in error, went upon the scaffold as licensee of the plaintiff in error and not as an invitee, and hence is not entitled to recover of the plaintiffs in error for the injury sustained by him in the fall of the scaffold. The judgment of the Court of Law and Chancery will, therefore, be reversed, and this court will enter judgment for the plaintiffs in error, as that is the judgment which should have been entered by the trial court.
Reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I cannot agree with the majority opinion on the subjects mentioned below.
1. The opinion states that “the evidence fails to show' that the use of the scaffold by Basham for getting upon the roof was for the common interest and mutual benefit of both parties. It was built for the use in doing work on the face of the gable and was never intended to be used as a means of access to the roof. * * . * The attempted proof of a custom or usage of trade for subcontractors to use scaffolds left in place by the general contractor was unsuccess
The opinion also states that the right of the plaintiff co use the scaffold is insisted upon, “because ‘this scaffold afforded a convenient and easy mode of reaching the roof.’ The trial court apparently took this view, but we cannot concur therein.”
It seems plain to me from the record and briefs in the case that the plaintiff did not seek recovery in the trial court, nor did the trial court rest its judgment on the ground that becalise the scaffold was a convenient and easy mode of access to the roof therefore the plaintiff was an invitee and was not a mere licensee in making such use thereof. The issue on this subject as made by the declaration was distinctly this: That the use of the scaffold in question was “reasonably necessary,” and that when the contract between the defendants, the general contractors, and the employers of the plaintiff, the subcontractors, was entered into, and under that contract, “it was contemplated by the parties that the servants of the” (subcontractors, amongst whom was the plaintiff) “who should be engaged in the performance of' (the) plumbing work, should use the scaffold * * * whenever it became reasonably necessary
Now the testimony aforesaid, quoted in the opinion of Judge Burks, was introduced by the plaintiff as tending to show the understanding aforesaid, and that the true construction of the contract between the general and subcontractors was that contended for by the plaintiff, when such contract is read in the light of the custom or usage mentioned. And, as I see it, this testimony was not introduced to prove a mere local custom or usage, but a general custom or usage on the subject, prevailing everywhere. And the testimony, in the absence of any objection thereto (and there was none), or of any evidence in any limiting its effect (of which there was none), was amply sufficient to prove such general custom or usage. Indeed this is in effect admitted in the concluding brief for the defendant, where it is said: “We submit that while there was evidence tending to show that it was customary for such employees to use such scaffolding when necessary, there was no proof at all of such custom attending mere convenence.”
As the case comes before us, therefore, with the decision of the trial court in favor of the plaintiff, we must, as I think, regard the fact as concluded that under the contract between the defendants and the employers of the plaintiff, when construed in the light of the general custom or usage of the trade on the subject, it was contemplated by the parties that the plaintiff should use the scaffold in question, as he did, for access to the roof of the building, if it was reasonably necessary for him so to do in the progress of his work thereon as a plumber. That is to say, it must be taken to have been within the contemplation of the defendants when they contracted for the plumbing work with the employers of the plaintiff, that the plaintiff' would use the
2. I think, too, that the question whether the use made of the scaffold by the plaintiff as a means of access to his place of work on the roof, was a reasonably necessary use, is concluded in favor of the plaintiff by the decision of the court below.
On this question the evidence is very conflicting.
The evidence for the defendants, it is true, is to the effect that such use was not reasonably necessary, but merely a convenient use. That evidence is in substance that there was only one way of ascent to the roof provided by the defendants for the carpenters employed by them, and also for the plumbers employed by the subcontractors, and that was (in so far as such way is material in this case) through one of the two dormer windows on the west side of the roof over the south gable of the building (such window being the window nearest the valley of the roof, the exit from this window being some distance to the north of the vent or stack-pipe on which the plaintiff was about to place a collar and lower down on the roof than such pipe), thence northward and away from such vent pipe to and up. the valley of the roof, on a 2x12 timber with cleats on it, to the comb or ridge of the roof (a still greater distance away from the vent pipe), thence back, southward, on the comb or ridge of the roof until a point was reached immediately above the vent pipe, thence down the steep roof to the vent pipe—a
The evidence in the record does not definitely locate the dormer window or the vent pipe aforesaid on the roof, but sufficiently so to indicate approximately the respective routes on the roof aforesaid, the former route being indicated by dotted lines (....) and the latter route by dash lines (........) on the following sketch:
And just here is the turning point in the case, as I see it, on the question of whether the route or way taken by the plaintiff was a reasonably necessary route to his place of work, namely,-the question whether the scaffold was or was not on the same level with the dormer window-sills, for, if so, as contended by the defendants, the plaintiff, by going through the dormer window, A, would have been, when emerging from that window and as he stood on its sill, at its south corner, within three or four feet from a point directly underneath the vent-pipe, and on the same level as he was when he stood on the scaffold at the cornice aforesaid, and he could have thus stepped to the board afore
And, as tending to weaken the testimony for the defendant to the effect that the dormer window, B, route was provided by them as the route or way to the roof for all workmen on the building, it was shown by the testimony for the plaintiff that the plumbers did not use that way in putting the collars on the vent or stack-pipes, on the roof of the north gable (which preceded the work about which the plaintiff was engaged when the accident occurred), but
3. The testimony for the plaintiff is very explicit on the point as to what the .defect was in the construction of the scaffold which caused it to fall with the plaintiff. That was to the effect that it was not braced at all underneath the end of it which fell and that such bracing was reasonably necessary to support the scaffold for the use of it aforesaid by the plaintiff and other workmen as a means of ascent to the roof.
Such being the case as shown by the record, I feel that there was no error in the action of the trial judge in finding for the plaintiff, and I am unwilling to disturb his decision.