7 Wash. 517 | Wash. | 1893
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiff suffered personal injury while engaged in tearing down a building belonging to the defendant, .and recovered a judgment for damages growing out of such injury, from which defendant has appealed.
One of the grounds upon which the appellant seeks a reversal is, that the building was being taken down under contract, and that the plaintiff was working for the contractor and not for the company. The conclusion to which we have come as to other questions involved'makes it unnecessary that we should decide this one.
Appellant asks that we should go further and direct the non-suit of plaintiff. At the close of the testimony on the part of the plaintiff appellant moved for a non-suit, which was denied and exception taken; and if the action of the court in denying such motion was wrong, appellant will be entitled to that measure of relief. It will, therefore, become necessary that we should pass upon the question of the sufficiency of the proof offered by the plaintiff, before he rested, to sustain a verdict in his favor. We have carefully examined all of such proof and are unable to find anything therein which sufficiently points to the negligence of the defendant to authorize the jury to find it guilty of such negligence. There is practically no proof tending to show negligence on the part of the defendant or its agents in tearing down the building, excepting the fact that it fell at a time when it was not expected that it would.
The fact of the falling of a building which is designed to stand up has been held to furnish proof that it was negligently constructed, and respondent cites some cases of this kind to combat the theory of the appellant. But it is evident that they are not applicable to the case at bar. The fact that this building fell cannot be any proof of neligence, for to cause it to fall was the very thing which was sought to be accomplished by the labor in which the plaintiff was engaged.
The proof fails to show to what extent the outside boards or plank had been removed. It only shows that boards had been knocked off and carried away; but how many or what proportion they bore to the whole is in no way disclosed. There may have been such a part thereof left upon the building as would lead a prudent person to believe that it would be safe to remove more of them before there would be any danger of the building falling, and before there would be any reasonable probability of the force engaged being able to push it over, or of a team being able to pull it down. And notwithstanding such appearance on the part of the building, it may have fallen by reason of some inherent and undiseoverable defect in its construction.
It was urged on the part of the appellant, that even though the manner in which the work was prosecuted con
Despondent urges that the measure of relief aslced by appellant should not be granted for the reason that the trial court erroneously excluded proof offered by him which, if admitted, would have shown negligence on the part of appellant. We cannot so find, as, in our opinion, the proof offered would not have materially strengthened plaintiff’s case.
The judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to grant the non-suit as asked by appellant.
Stiles, Scott and Anders, JJ., concur.
Dunbar, C. J., dissents.