Cougle v. McKee
Cougle v. McKee
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
There is but a single question raised on this record. In considering that question it is best to recall the familiar propo
The defendants are contractors who were engaged in building a stand-pipe for the borough of Bethlehem. The structure was to be of iron, fifty feet in height and fifty feet in circumference. It was built in sections or rings, each of which was five or six feet in height. After the first ring was secured to the bottom of the stand-pipe a scaffold was erected extending around the inside of it, from which a second ring was bolted upon the first. The scaffold was then raised again and a third ring put in place, and so on until a height of forty-five feet was reached. So far the scaffolds had been regularly built by a competent carpenter and they had successively sustained the weight of the workmen and the materials and tools required by them. The last ring was all that remained to complete the walls of the stand-pipe, and to put this in place it became necessary to raise the scaffold once more. The carpenter was not sent for to do this work, but Milson, one of the defendants, taking Murphy one of the ironworkers on the structure with him, erected the scaffold, completing it just as the day closed. On the following morning soon after the workmen began their labor part of the scaffold fell, taking several of the men down with it a distance of forty-five feet. The plaintiff was among those who fell and was seriously injured. If his employers were guilty of negligence in not providing him with a safe place on which to work, he can recover, in the absence of contributory negligence on his part. If they were not, he has no cause of action. This question is one of law, if the facts on which it is raised are settled; but if the facts are in doubt or if the evi
This is a hard case in any aspect of it, and requires careful consideration. The plaintiff has suffered great injury, but the defendants ought not to be called upon to respond in damages
The judgment must for this reason be reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.
Reference
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- Negligence—Questions of fact—Conflict of evidence. When upon all the evidence no question of fact is left in doubt the trial judge should direct the verdict; but if there is a conflict in the evidence the conflict must be decided by the jury before the legal value of the facts can be pronounced by the court. Plaintiff was injured by the fall of a scaffold erected by his fellow workmen and his employe*. There was testimony on behalf of plaintiff, contra-, dieted by defendant’s evidence, that the scaffold was erected in haste, that wrought iron nails should have been used, that they should have been driven at an angle, that cleats should have been used, and that without these the scaffold was unsafe. Held, that, as these were questions of fact and not of law, they should have been left to the jury, and a binding charge in favor of defendant was error. The facts that the scaffolding fell under less weight than similar scaffolding had sustained previously; that it was built not by carpenters but by men unfamiliar with such work, while not proof of negligence are circumstances proper for the jury to take into account and which may help them to a conclusion upon the question of negligence.