43 So. 1006 | La. | 1907
Statement of the Case.
Plaintiffs sue for the damages resulting to them from the death of their minor son, who lost his life while in defendant’s employ through an accident which plaintiffs attribute to defendant’s negligence. Defendant denies the alleged negligence, denies that the accident occurred while plaintiffs’ son was engaged in the discharge of any duty to which he had been assigned by it, and alleges that the apparatus by which he was injured was under the control of another person and was being used by the minor, at his own instance and for his own purposes.
The following are the facts as disclosed by the evidence: Plaintiffs’ son, William Gross, was about 20 years old at the date of his death, and, for several years prior to that event, had been working in defendant’s saw and planing mill in the capacity of oiler and helper, there being no testimony suggesting the idea that he had ever been called on to operate any of the machinery or had ever attempted to do so. In June, 1904, or about that time, defendant entered into an agreement with George Fehl (who was engaged, or about to engage, in the business of dealing in sawed and split wood), whereby Fehl was to take all the “spliced wood,” or “cross timbers,” from the rafts which came to the mill at a certain price per cord, and was to be supplied, from the mill, with the power necessary for the sawing. It was also agreed that he should be allowed to remove from that part of the mill in which the work of the mill was done and to set up, in the rear of the building, an apparatus consisting, in part, of an oblong iron frame, suspended vertically, so as to afford it a forward and backward swinging movement, upon the lower end of which was (at that time) a 16-inch circular saw; and,
Opinion.
There is no basis of fact or law upon which •defendant can be condemned in this case. Plaintiffs’ minor son was not employed to operate the saw by which he was killed, and was operating it, at the time of the accident, not hy the directions of any one connected with the defendant, but of his own volition •and for his own purposes. The saw apparatus was not even part of the machinery of the mill which it was his duty to oil, but was a separate machine which had been turned over to the control and use of a third person and with which defendant had no connection save that it owned it; that it occupied a place in the rear of its building; that it furnished the motive power needed for its operation; and that, when the person who had control of it was not using it himself, it was at times used by its officers and employes for the sawing of fuel for themselves and families.
The judgment appealed from is accordingly affirmed.