55 So. 754 | La. | 1911
Defendant company operates a large lumber plant, where modern machinery and devices are employed for carrying on the business. Lumber is conveyed on chains from the kiln to the sorting shed or compartment, and by electric car from the sorting shed to the storage shed.
Plaintiff was employed as a laborer in connection with the motor car which transported lumber between the sorting and storage-sheds. It was his duty to adjust the tongs suspended from a frame in front of the motor in taking up a load of lumber in the sorting shed and in carrying it to, and depositing it in, the storage shed. He was known as a tong hooker. While in the active discharge of his duties, he was injured,, and he is now suing defendant in damages, alleging that the accident happened through, the fault of defendant company.
Defendant answers that plaintiff assumed the risks incidental to his employment, and that he was careless and negligent after having been repeatedly warned, and that he cannot recover.
In oral argument defendant pressed the-
The method pursued by defendant was to have two pieces of lumber called “bolsters,” measuring 4 by 4 inches, about 4% feet long, placed crosswise on the floor of the sorting shed, upon which the lumber brought into the shed from the kiln was deposited. These 4x4s were about six feet apart, and they projected only a few inches beyond the sides of the pile of lumber which rested upon them.
It then became the duty of the electrician in charge of the electric car, which was suspended from an overhead rail, to take position over the pile of lumber to be transported to the storage shed, and to lower the tongs, with plaintiff on the frame, for him to adjust the tongs under the ends of the 4x4 pieces. The electrician would then raise the tongs, thus lifting the load of lumber, together with plaintiff, to a sufficient height, and carry the load some few hundred yards to the storage shed, where it was to be deposited. Arriving at the proper place in the shed, it became the duty of plaintiff to get on the pile of lumber and turn it half around, so that the load might be lowered to one side of the gangway, as the lumber was all piled with the ends of the piles abutting the gangway. The engineer would then lower the load in proper position, either on the floor of the shed or on top of another pile in course of building. The plaintiff would release the tongs when the load was placed in position, thus leaving it, in its entirety, including the 4x4 pieces upon which the lumber had been carried from t'he sorting shed.
The contrivance appears from the evidence to be unique and useful, and with care and sound materials must have been reasonably safe.
It was while a load of lumber was about being lowered into position in the sorting shed that plaintiff was injured. The car had stopped, the signal had been given, plaintiff was on top of the lumber, the load had been turned in the right direction, the engineer had begun to lower the load, when the two pieces of 4x4 broke, the load of lumber was precipitated to the floor, together with plaintiff, whose arm and leg were caught and broken in the scattering lumber.
Defendant says that plaintiff was negligent, disobedient to instructions, and at fault.
Plaintiff appears to have been a man of ordinary intelligence, about 20 years of age, with some experience as a laborer in and around sawmills. On applying for work, he was told by the foreman to go into the lumber transporting department and to watch the tong hookers, and, if he could do what they were doing, he would give him employment. After a half day of observation, plaintiff told the foreman that he could do the work of a tong hooker, and he was engaged, without further instructions from the foreman; and he was thus employed for several days, when the accident complained of happened. The testimony shows that plaintiff did exactly as he saw other tong hookers do in discharging their duties, yet defendant says he was negligent and at fault in getting on the load of lumber while it was suspended and about to be lowered into place on the floor. The .same thing was done by the other tong hookers, and we conclude from the evidence that it was necessary for plaintiff to get on the lumber to swing the pile or load halfway around from the electric car. Defendant says that plaintiff should have got off the lumber and onto the tong frame just as soon as the suspended pile of lumber was in position to be
It appears that the two 4x4 pieces upon which the pile of lumber rested and was being carried was heard by the electrician to crack before they broke, and the load of lumber was scattered in its fall; that he shouted “look out” to plaintiff; that plaintiff, not hearing the cracking of the 4x4 pieces, thought the electrician was telling him to look out, as the pile was not yet in true position to be lowered, and he (plaintiff) was looking down the side of the pile to make it right, when he and the lumber fell. Another witness, on the floor, saw or heard the cracking pieces and shouted to plaintiff, but the latter did not hear him. Even if he had heard, we doubt if he (plaintiff) could have saved himself. This last witness further expresses the opinion that the load might have been lowered in safety, after the cracking of the 4x4 pieces, if the electrician had not suddenly arrested the descent of the load on hearing the cracking pieces. We cannot agree with this opinion; besides the electrician and plaintiff deny that the load had begun to descend. The electrician says that he was in the act of arranging for the descent, when he heard the cracking sound; that he sought to hold the tongs in position, and to warn plaintiff of the trouble. He held the tongs, but he failed to warn plaintiff. There may be some doubt as to the exact condition of affairs just at that moment, but we are of the opinion that if the electrician jolted the load of lumber that it was not the proximate or immediate cause of the accident, and that it therefore becomes unnecessary to decide the point. And it is not necessary to decide whether the electrician, in charge of the motor car, and plaintiff, a common laborer on the load of lumber which was being pushed by the motor, are fellow servants, or not, for we are of the opinion that plaintiff could not have saved himself from injury if the tong frame had not been jolted by the electrician. And in view of our decision in Evans v. Louisiana Lumber Co., 111 La. 534, 35 South. 736, defendant is liable for the fault of its skilled employes for damages inflicted by him upon another unskilled employs. When these two pieces of 4x4 upon which the lumber was resting broke, the lumber had to fall, and the resulting jolt would most likely have thrown plaintiff from a position on the tong frame, if he had secured one; but, in his ignorance of the breaking of the 4x4 pieces, he could not have been expected to know that there was any danger. He had not seen other bolsters break; he had been told by the electrician that they sometimes broke, and to be on the watch out; but he -was not told that defendant was in the habit of furnishing defective appliances, and he could not have supposed that these particular pieces would break.
Plaintiff had no means of seeing the pieces
It was the duty of defendant to have known the true condition of this material. One of the broken 4x4 pieces was offered in evidence and exhibited in court. It contains a large knot hole at the place where broken. It is certainly a very defective piece, and the testimony shows that the other piece was even more defective. Defendant is clearly at fault in permitting such material to be used for the purpose which the testimony shows it was used.
The proximate cause of the injury was the unsound bolsters which broke beneath the stack of lumber, and which in turn, caused the injury to plaintiff.
This is a stronger case than that of the Grand Trunk Railway Co. v. Cummings, 106 U. S. 700, 1 Sup. Ct. 493, 27 L. Ed. 266, where it was held that recovery might be had if the negligence of the defendant contributed; that is to say, had a share in producing the injury. Here it was primarily at fault.
Plaintiff sustained a broken arm and a crushed right leg. The leg was amputated some inches above the knee. He suffered much, and the jury awarded him $7,000 as damages.
We are of the opinion that the verdict is not excessive, and it will be affirmed.
Plaintiff has answered the appeal and asks for interest.
It is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the verdict and judgment appealed from be amended by adding legal interest from date of judgment in the lower court, and, as thus amended, it be affirmed. Appellant to pay costs of appeal.