Summary
In Asen v. Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co. (1960), 11 Wis.2d 594, 106 N.W.2d 269, we construed sec. 274.11(4), Stats., to authorize this court to review an appealable order or portions thereof as to which no notice of appeal has been served, if the parties appear before us and argue the merits without noting any objection to our jurisdiction.
Summary of this case from Vande Hei v. Vande HeiOpinion
October 31, 1960 —
November 29, 1960.
APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Milwaukee county: MICHAEL T. SULLIVAN, Circuit Judge. Reversed.
For the appellants there was a brief by Wickham, Borgelt, Skogstad Powell of Milwaukee, for the Jos. Schlitz Brewing Company, and Kivett Kasdorf of Milwaukee, for the Naegele Outdoor Advertising Company of Wisconsin, Inc., attorneys, and Alan M. Clack, Norman C. Skogstad, and Donald R. Peterson of counsel, all of Milwaukee, and oral argument by Mr. Peterson and Mr. Clack.
For the respondent there was a brief by Phillips, Phillips, Hoffman Lay of Milwaukee, and oral argument by N. Paley Phillips.
Waldomar N. Asen brought action for damages arising from personal injuries sustained by him on December 8, 1955, while painting a large, bulletin-type, outdoor sign at Sixth and Michigan streets in the city of Milwaukee. The defendants were Jos. Schlitz Brewing Company, owner of the sign, and Naegele Outdoor Advertising Company of Wisconsin, Inc., which had constructed the sign for Schlitz in 1952. Mr. Asen was employed by the O.D. Sign Company, which had agreed to paint the sign for Schlitz on this occasion.
The sign proper was about 50 feet long, 16 to 18 feet high, and its lower edge was about 10 feet above the ground. The designer had apparently wished to create an impression of depth and, among other things done for this purpose, a metal sheet or apron called a molding was placed in front of, and down from the bottom of the sign. The molding measured about 3 feet vertically, and ran the length of the sign. The distance between the surface of the sign and the molding was 2 feet, 8 inches. Struts extended at right angles from the sign to the top of the molding. These struts consisted of 2 x 4's, and were at intervals of 2 feet or more. There were other members below the struts, arranged so as to attach the molding to the supports of the sign. For a few feet near each end of the sign, there was a solid covering over the space between the molding and the sign, but at all points material to this case the space between the struts was not covered except that one or more loose boards lay across some of the struts.
Another feature of this sign was a panel attached to the face of the sign and set forward from it. The surface of the panel was a rhomboid, and bore the name "Schlitz" in script. The sides of the rhomboid were vertical, and about 12 feet in height. The top and bottom of the rhomboid were longer than the sides, and parallel to each other but not horizontal. The slope was upward from the left toward the right of anyone viewing the sign. The rhomboid extended a horizontal distance of about 18 feet. The surface of the rhomboid was 15 inches away from the surface of the sign proper, and the edges of the rhomboid were beveled.
Exhibit 13, reproduced herewith, is a photograph taken from the right-hand end of the sign, and showing the bottom and right-hand edge of the rhomboid, the space between the molding and the sign, and the struts.
Before Asen's accident, he had primed the rhomboid, and then started to prime the surface of the sign below the rhomboid. While priming the rhomboid, he worked from a ladder placed on the ground and leaning against the rhomboid. Later, when priming the face of the sign, he stood on a board which lay across two struts. He testified in substance that when he arrived on the job, there were some boards lying across the struts. They were 1-inch boards, about 3 feet long and 8 inches wide. He stood on one of them which he had found, or had himself placed across two struts underneath the rhomboid, and while working he was in a stooped position. When he stood up, he hit his shoulder against the edge of the rhomboid. lost his balance, and fell to the ground.
The jury found that the defendants failed to provide a place of employment as safe as the nature and place of the employment would reasonably permit, and that plaintiff failed to exercise ordinary care for his own safety. Both failures were found to be causal, and 25 per cent attributed to plaintiff, and 75 per cent to defendants.
The parties made a number of motions after verdict. On October 9, 1959, the circuit court ordered a new trial on all issues, and denied all other motions. Defendants appealed from the portions of the order denying their motions. Plaintiff requested a review of the portions of the order granting a new trial on all issues, and denying his motions.
Additional facts will be referred to in the opinion.
1. Jurisdiction to review the order. But for ch. 189, Laws of 1959, creating sec. 274.11 (4), Stats., our jurisdiction to review the order entered October 9, 1959, would be open to serious question. The new sec. 274.11 (4) provides:
"The right of appeal shall exist from the time of the entry of the appealable order or judgment and in cases of appeal the supreme court shall have jurisdiction over the subject matter of the action from that time. The procedural requirements of subs. (1), (2), and (3) and of this chapter shall relate only to the jurisdiction of the court over the parties to the appeal."
Since the order in question grants a new trial, it is appealable. Sec. 274.33 (3), Stats. Neither party has challenged our jurisdiction, and both have fully argued all questions raised. The defendants appear to have appealed only from the portions of the order which are not appealable. See Raether v. Filer Stowell Mfg. Co. (1913), 155 Wis. 130, 134, 143 N.W. 1035. The plaintiff requested a review of the portion of the order granting a new trial, but since no appeal had been taken from that portion, sec. 274.12 (1), under which plaintiff proceeded, did not authorize a request for review. His proper remedy was to appeal. Sec. 274.12 (4).
In Sicchio v. Alvey (1960), 10 Wis.2d 528, 539, 103 N.W.2d 544, we left open the question of whether we are authorized by sec. 274.11 (4), Stats., to review an appealable order as to which no notice of appeal has been served if the parties appear before us and argue the merits without noting any objection to our jurisdiction. We now conclude that sec. 274.11 (4) does authorize such review; that notwithstanding any irregularities, the matter is before us as fully as if there had been an appeal from the entire order. See Town of Madison v. City of Madison (1960), 12 Wis.2d 100, 106 N.W.2d 264.
2. Applicability of Order 18 of General Orders on Safety. The jury was instructed that Order 18, 2 Wis. Adm. Code, sec. Ind 1.18, was in force at the time and place in question, and provided in part:
"Where employees are required or permitted to work in elevated places, scaffolds or platforms shall be provided, except that ladders may be used if the work to be performed is of a transitory nature and extent, but only then if ladders can be used with a reasonable degree of safety."
Upon motions after verdict, the circuit court correctly determined that Order 18 was inapplicable. Its title is: "Scaffolds or Platforms for the Installation, Operation, Maintenance or Changing of Occupancy Equipment." A note is printed at the end of the order, as follows: "For equipment other than occupancy equipment, see General Orders on Safety in Construction." The General Orders on Safety in Construction appear in 3 Wis. Adm. Code, secs. Ind 35.001 ff. They are applicable to all operations incident to the maintenance of structures. Sec. Ind 35.02 (24), 3 Wis. Adm. Code, defines structure as "anything that is built or constructed, an edifice or building of any kind, or any piece of work artificially built up or composed of parts joined together in some definite manner." Requirements as to provision of scaffolds and ladders are found in these sections, but under sec. Ind 35.01, the responsibility for the provision and maintenance of protection rests upon the immediate employer unless the duty be assigned and properly executed by the assignee. The sign in question appears to us to fall within the classification of structure rather than occupancy equipment. Accordingly, neither Order 18, nor the General Orders on Safety in Construction imposed any duty on defendants in the circumstances before us.
3. Applicability of Order 17 of General Orders on Safety. Plaintiff claims that the area between the top of the molding and the surface of the sign was a platform and therefore subject to Order 17 (2 Wis. Adm. Code, sec. Ind 1.17). This order provides in material part that every platform, or other surface on which employees work, shall be substantially constructed, and if more than 24 inches in height shall be equipped with standard guardrails and toeboards unless guarded by location.
Upon motions after verdict, the circuit court concluded that the area in question was a platform, and that the jury should have been instructed as to the provisions of Order 17. As noted by the circuit court, Webster's New International Dictionary (2d ed.), defines the term "platform" as: "A horizontal and generally flat service, usually higher, and rarely lower, than the adjoining ground or floor; . . . an elevated ledge or shelf of a machine, as for reception of material esp., a raised flooring, stage, or dais, in a hall or the like, on which speakers, performers, etc., sit or stand."
We conclude, however, that the space in question was not a platform, but an open area having no surface except for the struts which covered only minute portions of the area, and the purpose of which, with other members, was to attach the molding to the sign. The fact that someone, or something could be supported by the struts was incidental. The real question is whether the defendants had a duty to construct the sign with a solid surface or covering over the open area.
Plaintiff argues that the presence of the one or more loose boards made this area a platform. But the only evidence as to the source of the boards was that they were there when plaintiff arrived and because of the paint spattering on them may have been there since some other time the sign was painted. This is an insufficient basis upon which to charge defendants with responsibility for their presence as part of the structure.
4. Duty of defendants under the safe-place statute. The defendants' responsibilities under the safe-place statute with respect to the area of the sign and with respect to the painting operations were only those of owners, and were not the broader duties of employers. Sec. 101.06, Stats., requires an owner of a place of employment to construct it so as to render it as free from danger as the nature of the employment and place of employment will reasonably permit.
There was conflicting evidence concerning the manner in which it was feasible to paint this sign. A defense witness, the man who had been in charge of constructing the sign, testified that a painter would work from a swinging stage, or might use a ladder for painting the lower portion of the sign. Mr. Asen testified, however, that while the surface of the rhomboid, and perhaps other parts of the sign could be painted from a ladder, the portions of the sign underneath the rhomboid could not be painted either from a swinging stage or from a ladder. In substance, he testified that a ladder placed upon the ground and leaning against the molding would be too far away from the sign proper for the painting in that area to be accomplished. Near the bottom of the sign, the ladder would be some 32 inches away from the surface to be painted. The location of the rhomboid with its surface standing 15 inches out from the surface of the sign proper would, according to Mr. Asen, prevent attachment of a swinging stage to the top of the sign in a proper and safe manner for use in painting the area beneath the rhomboid. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, it would support a finding that when a painter is painting the lower part of the sign, he must be supported by something placed across the struts, and that unless there was some substantial device covering an area much broader than the board on which Asen did stand, the place on which the painter must necessarily stand was unsafe. The evidence shows that it was the practice to paint the sign every four months.
Thus, if we assume a jury finding that the painter must be supported somehow in the area involved, the ultimate question is whether construction of the sign, without providing a solid place to stand within the area, was a failure to make the place of employment as free from danger as the nature of the employment would permit.
Some of the members of this court, including the writer this opinion, would conclude that the safe-place statute required defendants, if they chose to construct the sign and molding in the manner they did, to anticipate that a painter would need to stand in the open area and, therefore, to cover that area in such manner that there would be safe support.
The majority, however, point out that the danger was not due to any unsoundness of the structure, and conclude that the provision of a device which would make the area safe for a painter was the duty of the painter's immediate employer, and not the duty of the defendants as owners. Thus, it is decided that the circuit court property set aside the verdict. but should have granted judgment dismissing the complaint. It is unnecessary to discuss the questions raised concerning comparison of negligence and damages.
By the Court. — Order reversed; cause remanded with instructions to enter judgment dismissing plaintiff's complaint, with costs.