150 P. 983 | Cal. | 1915
William Garland, owner of the land, entered into a contract with A. Pantages, to erect thereon a building to be used as a theater, Pantages agreeing to lease this building from the owner. In pursuance of this agreement Garland entered into a contract with the Alta Planing Mill Company, a corporation, to construct the building. This contract called upon the Alta Planing Mill Company to do all of the work in the matter of the construction of the building "excepting the plumbing, heating, ventilation, electrical works, decoration and the fitting up of the stage and elevators, which will be let under separate contracts." The work of the Alta Planing Mill Company was substantially completed, and other independent contractors were in and about the building in the performance of their various contracts. Says the architect's superintendent: "Independent contractors were working there together in the way all buildings are built." Pantages secured permission from the owner to have certain signs painted on the building. He employed as an independent contractor George D. Erskine to do this work. Erskine sent two of his men to paint signs on a dead wall of the building. There was a five-foot passageway between the theater building and the building next adjoining. This adjoining building was about two stories high. The painters carried their apparatus to the top of this building and there rigged their scaffold. They placed the hooks supporting the tackle on top of the Pantages building and, standing on the roof of the adjoining building, proceeded to hoist their scaffold. On this scaffold and unsecured they placed a bucket of paint. While hauling up the scaffold into place the side of it caught against the wall, tilting it, and throwing off the bucket of paint, which struck and injured plaintiff in the passageway below, at work preparing that passageway for a cement floor. Plaintiff was an employee of the Alta Planing *591 Mill Company. He brought his action against the owner, Garland, as to whom it was dismissed, and no question is raised over the dismissal; against the Alta Planing Mill Company, in whose favor a nonsuit was granted; against A. Pantages, in whose favor a nonsuit was also granted; against George D. Erskine, against whom he recovered judgment. His appeal is directed to the errors of the court in granting the nonsuits.
As to the defendant A. Pantages, it is undisputed that he had employed Erskine as an independent contractor, and Erskine, as has been said, has suffered judgment in favor of plaintiff. Appellant recognizes the general rule that exonerates the employer of an independent contractor and fixes the responsibility upon the contractor himself, but insists that his case comes under the exception to the rule which exception sustains an action against the employer under the doctrine ofrespondeat superior, where the performance of the contract in its general nature is necessarily injurious to a third person, or where, under grant or permission to do a specific work in a careful manner, which otherwise one could not lawfully do at all, the employer is not permitted to avoid the consequences of the negligent performance by his contractor of the duty primarily imposed upon him — the employer. The second class of cases is illustrated by Colgrove v. Smith,
The other class of cases is that where danger and peril inheres in the very nature of the work and where, therefore, it is not in consonance with justice that the responsibility for injury resulting from or occasioned by this peril should be passed on to the contractor. But appellant's effort to bring this case within that category is manifestly futile. There was nothing inherently dangerous in the character of the work here to be done, and if it should even be conceded that it were, it is plain that it was no hazard or peril inhering in the nature of the work that caused the accident. It was the merest negligence — negligence almost gross in character — the hauling up of a bucket of paint, the bucket itself not even being fastened, upon an empty scaffold carrying no person to direct and guide it, and no person to look out for the bucket of paint. Such conduct in its nature is too plain to call for further consideration, and may be dismissed with the single comment that manifestly this negligent act formed no attribute, part, or characteristic of the work itself. It is sufficient here to cite Frassi v. McDonald,
The nonsuit in favor of defendant Pantages was therefore properly granted.
The argument against the nonsuit in favor of the defendant Alta Planing Mill Company addresses itself to somewhat different considerations. It is said that the Alta Planing Mill Company, employer of this plaintiff, was guilty of negligence in allowing the sign painters to go upon the premises at all, and that it was also guilty of negligence in not providing a safe and secure place for plaintiff in which to do his work. Of course the burden is on the plaintiff in such a case as this to show affirmatively the negligence of the employer, and the mere fact of the accident or injury does not raise the presumption of such negligence.(Sappenfield v. Main Street R.R. Co.,
The nonsuit as to the Alta Planing Mill Company was therefore properly granted, and the judgment appealed from is therefore affirmed.
Melvin, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred.