Defendant Miller Building Corporation appeals from a judgment entered upon a jury verdict finding that plaintiff, Landon W. Sloan, Jr., was injured by defendant’s willful or wanton negligence and awarding him damages of $464,000 for his personal injuries and his wife, Phyllis Fay Sloan, damages of $40,000 for loss of consortium. This case has been previously considered by this Court upon plaintiffs’ appeal from an order granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment; summary judgment was reversed and the case was remanded for trial.
Sloan v. Miller Bldg. Corp.,
Briefly summarized, and only to the extent necessary to an understanding of the issues raised on appeal, the evidence at trial tended to show that defendant was the general contractor for the Campus Edge Phase II Condominium Project in Wilmington, N.C.; plaintiff was hired by defendant as a subcontractor to complete the exterior carpentry trim on the building. On Monday, 21 October 1985, plaintiff was working on the third floor of the structure. In order to remove himself from the path of other workers who were carrying construction materials, plaintiff backed up and sat on a scaffold at the open edge of the floor while he talked with some other carpenters about the work they were doing. The scaffold collapsed and plaintiff fell three floors to the ground, sustaining serious injuries.
The evidence showed that defendant had not placed any standard barrier protection around the perimeter of the third floor as required by OSHA standards; the only barrier protection which had ever been provided consisted of ropes tied to each post around the third floor perimeter. Those ropes had been removed on Saturday, 19 October 1985, by the painting contractor so that the posts could be painted. Neither the painting contractor nor defendant had replaced the ropes or erected any other barrier protection around the perimeter. When plaintiff arrived at work on the following Monday morning, 21 October 1985, he noticed that the ropes had been removed, but he made no effort to replace the ropes nor did he ask defendant to replace them. There was also evidence tending to show that defendant had been cited by OSHA compliance officers on multiple occasions for its failure to provide adequate barrier protection on open sided floors.
I.
Plaintiff Landon Sloan originally filed his complaint against Miller Building Corporation on 11 July 1986; Phyllis Fay Sloan was not a party to that action. Landon Sloan submitted to a voluntary dismissal without prejudice of his claim on 10 October 1988. On 6 October 1989, plaintiffs filed their complaint in this action, which included a claim on behalf of Phyllis Fay Sloan for loss of consortium. Defendant moved to dismiss Phyllis Fay Sloan’s claim on the grounds that the claim was barred by the statute of limitations. Defendant’s Assignment of Error No. 1 is to the denial of its motion to dismiss Phyllis Fay Sloan’s action for loss of consortium.
G.S. § 1-52(5) is the statute of limitations applicable to a spouse’s claim for loss of consortium and requires that the claim be brought within three years from the time the cause of action accrues. Under North Carolina law, a spouse’s claim for loss of consortium must be joined with the other spouse’s claim for personal injury.
Nicholson v. Hugh Chatham Memorial Hospital, Inc.,
In the present case, defendant’s allegedly negligent acts occurred on 21 October 1985; the three year statute of limitations for Phyllis
Sloan’s loss of consortium action
II.
Defendant’s Assignment of Error No. 3 is directed to the denial of its motion for directed verdict on the issue of its willful or wanton negligence. Defendant contends there was insufficient evidence of willful and wanton negligence to overcome the bar of Landon Sloan’s recovery by reason of his own contributory negligence and that the issue should not have been submitted to the jury.
In its opinion in the previous appeal of this case, another panel of this Court determined that at the summary judgment stage of the proceeding plaintiffs had forecast sufficient evidence of willful and wanton negligence on the part of Miller Building Corporation so that “reasonable jurors could differ on the question of whether the conduct of defendant. . . constituted willful or wanton misconduct sufficient to overcome the bar of Sloan’s contributory negligence.”
Sloan,
at 169,
The legal question presented by defendant’s motion for directed verdict is essentially the same as that presented by its motion for summary judgment, i.e., “whether there is sufficient evidence to sustain a jury verdict in [plaintiffs] favor ... or to present a question for the jury.”
Davis v. Dennis Lilly Co.,
In reversing summary judgment, the court held that plaintiffs had shown sufficient evidence to establish a jury issue as to defendant’s willful or wanton negligence by forecasting evidence that Miller lacked basic safety procedures at the job site where plaintiff was injured; that it had been indifferent to, and had failed to comply with, OSHA standards for standard railings or their equivalent barrier protection on that job site; and that defendant had a pattern of noncompliance with, and conscious disregard of, OSHA standards on its other job sites, including those standards relating to safety railings.
At trial, plaintiffs offered evidence that defendant was aware of its obligation to erect standard safety railings on open floors; defendant’s safety consultant testified that it was the general contractor’s responsibility to erect proper barrier protection and that ropes tied to beams were not sufficient. Defendant’s superintendent on the Campus Edge job, who was also the job’s safety coordinator, had received a report a month before plaintiff’s accident indicating the lack of railings, but had taken no remedial action.
Considering the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, as is required when ruling upon a defendant’s motion for directed verdict, we hold it sufficient for reasonable jurors to find that defendant was willfully or wantonly negligent.
See Estate of Smith v.
Underwood,
In a related assignment of error, defendant’s Assignment of Error No. 7, defendant contends the trial court erred by instructing the jury as follows:
Now, you need not find that the defendant’s conduct was willful and wanton. It is sufficient that you find that the defendant’s conduct was either willful or wanton under the definitions I just gave to you.
The instruction was requested by plaintiff and is a correct statement of the law. Willful negligence arises from the tortfeasor’s deliberate breach of a legal duty owed to another, while wanton negligence is “done of a wicked purpose or. .. done needlessly, manifesting a reckless indifference to the rights of others.”
Siders v. Gibbs,
III.
In its Assignments of Error No. 4 and 5, defendant asserts the trial court erred in denying defendant’s motion for a directed verdict on the issue of plaintiff’s willful or wanton contributory negligence and in failing to submit this issue to the jury. We do not agree.
A defendant’s failure to plead an affirmative defense ordinarily results in waiver thereof, unless the issue is tried by the express or implied consent of the parties. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 15(b) (1990);
Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Edwards,
In this case, plaintiffs’ amended complaint alleged,
inter alia,
defendant’s willful and wanton negligence. In its answer to the amended complaint, defendant pleaded only plaintiff’s contributory negligence and set forth no allegations of fact sufficient to give notice that it was asserting, as a defense, that plaintiff’s conduct had amounted to willful or wanton contributory negligence. Plaintiffs expressly objected to trying the issue of willful or wanton contributory negligence. Therefore, the trial court did not err in denying defendant’s motion for a directed verdict based on plaintiff’s willful or wanton contributory negligence or in refusing defendant’s
IV.
By its Assignment of Error No. 8, defendant asserts the trial court erred in denying its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Defendant relies on the arguments made in support of its Assignments of Error No. 3 and 4, which we have considered and rejected in Sections II and III above. For the same reasons, we find no error in the trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
V.
By its Assignment of Error No. 6, defendant contends the trial court erred in refusing defendant’s request that the jury be instructed with respect to insulating negligence. Defendant argues that any negligent act on its part was insulated by the painting contractor’s removal of the rope barrier, and that another subcontractor could have removed a brace from the scaffold upon which plaintiff sat, causing it to collapse.
Insulating negligence is “a new proximate cause which breaks the connection with the original cause and becomes itself solely responsible for the result in question. It must be an independent force, entirely superseding the original action and rendering its effect in the causation remote.”
Hairston v. Alexander Tank & Equipment Co.,
The trial court need only give a requested instruction which is supported by the evidence.
State v. Cummings,
VI.
Finally, we have carefully considered defendant’s assignments of error relating to the admission of a videotape of the building where the plaintiff fell (Assignment of Error No. 2), and the denial of defendant’s motion for a new trial (Assignment of Error No. 9). Each of these rulings to which defendant assigns error was addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court and may be disturbed on appeal only where an abuse of such discretion is clearly shown.
Campbell v. Pitt County Memorial Hosp. Inc.,
No error.
