Press v. Penny
Press v. Penny
Opinion of the Court
The action is to recover damages on account of a personal injury. Succinctly stated, the facts are as follows: Defendants, Alexander Penny and John Gentles, on January 1, 1907, were partners, doing a large retail dry goods business in the building located on the southwest corner of Washington avenue and Broadway, in the city of St. Louis. These streets are public ones and the most traveled of any streets
The issues were submitted to the court sitting as a jury, who found for plaintiff and assessed his damages at $1,500. Defendants moved the court to declare the law to be that under the law and the evidence plaintiff
For the purpose of deciding the main question in the case, we will assume that Rule was negligent and that his negligence caused him to fall upon and injure plaintiff. The rule of respondeat superior, as ordinarily understood, has no application to the facts of this case, for the evidence is all one way that neither Rule or the painting company was the servant or agent of defendants in or about the work of removing the sign. The evidence also is all one way that defendants did not select the tools or implements for removing the sign, or direct in what manner it should be removed; on the contrary, the painting company, as an independent contractor, selected its own time and its own tools and its own servants for the removal of the sign, without consulting defendants or either of them, therefore, the relation of the painting company to defendants is that of an independent contractor and hence defendants are not liable for the negligence of its servant Rule, if he was negligent. [City of Independence v. Slack, 134 Mo. 66; Benjamin v. Railway, 133 Mo. 274; Crenshaw v. Ullman, 113 Mo. 633; Loth v. Columbia Theater Co., 197 Mo. l. c. 354.] But the case was not decided' in the court below upon the theory that Rule was defendants’ servant but upon the theory that the work was of such a character as to endanger the traveling public upon Washington avenue, and for this reason it was the personal duty of defendants to superintend the removal of the sign, and this duty being a personal one defendants could not shift it to an independent contractor. The learned trial judge’s view of the law of the case is well expressed by the following declarations of law which he gave:
“2. The court sitting as a jury, instructs that the law does not permit a person to cast off a duty resting upon him hy operation of law upon an independent contractor, so as to exonerate himself from the con*127 sequences of its non-performance, and that the law imposes a duty on the occupant of a building abutting-upon a sidewalk of a public street, to so use the sidewalk in connection with his use of such building, as not to interfere with the rightful and proper use of such sidewalk by the public.
“3. The court, sitting as a jury, instructs where the injury to a pedestrian on a sidewalk, results directly from acts called for and made necessary by a contract entered into between the tenant of abutting property and an independent contractor, and not from acts which are merely collateral to the contract; the negligence of the servants of the independent contractor is the negligence of the tenant of the abutting property who employs him, and the tenant is liable for injuries to the pedestrian, just as if he directly did the negligent act himself; and where it appears that a large and unwieldy sign Avas placed by a tenant on the front of a building occupied by him, and could only be removed therefrom by placing a ladder on the sidewalk, and the tenant employed an independent contractor to remove the sign, and the servants of such independent contractor, by their negligence in accomplishing such removal, allowed the ladder to fall and injure a passerby, himself in the exercise of due care, such tenant is liable for such injury.”
The evidence shows that the sign could not have been removed by working from inside the building, for the reason the nails in its lower edge could not be reached by a person working from the windows. The placing of the ladders on the sidewalk for the purpose of removing the sign temporarily obstructed the walk, but the obstruction was not inherently dangerous, nor did it greatly interfere with the use of the walk. Neither was plaintiff’s injury caused by a collision with the ladder, in fact, he did not touch the ladder, therefore, he cannot maintain his action upon the theory that his injury resulted from the erection of a nuisance in a public
Dissenting Opinion
DISSENTING OPINION.
The workman, Rule, did not- exercise ordinary care in drawing the nail. He exerted great force in doing so when an ordinarily prudent man, under the circumstances (standing on a ladder over a crowded sidewalk), would have exerted slight force only. As a result of this extra force, the nail gave way and he was precipitated from the ladder to the sidewalk, whereby the plaintiff was injured. Therefore the negligence operating proximately to the plaintiff’s injury, was involved in the act of Rule drawing the nail for the purpose of removing the sign. This was an act called for by defendant’s contract with the independent contractor. The law affixes an obligation on the employer to respond even for the negligent act of an independent contractor or his servants, when the injury is one occasioned by the negligent performance of an act required to be done or rendered necessary, in the execution of the contract. [Robbins v. Chicago, 71 U. S. 679; Loth v. Columbia Theatre Company, 197 Mo. 328; Williamson v. Fisher, 50 Mo. 198; Homer v. Nicholson, 56 Mo. 220; Crenshaw v. Ullman, 113 Mo. 633, 638; 16 Amer. and Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), 196.]
Entertaining this view, I am of opinion the evidence tends to show a case of liability on the part of defendants which should be referred to the jury. I therefore deem the judgment of the court in this case in conflict with the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Loth v. Columbia Theatre Company, supra, and request the cause be certified to that court for a final determination.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.