8 La. App. 428 | La. Ct. App. | 1928
R. Z. Pigott, husband of the plaintiff and father of her minor child, was employed by Raymond Concrete Pile Company as engineer, for the purpose of operating a hoisting machine. The machine was located on a flat car and was operated by steam power. It was being used at the time in question to unload sand and gravel from cars, and to place the material at some other place desired by the operator. The sand and gravel in the car which was being unloaded, was caught up by a bucket at the end of a seventy-foot boom attached to the machine. When the bucket was full of sand or gravel, it together with the sand or gravel, weighed eight or nine thousand pounds. This weight at the end of the seventy-foot boom exerted a powerful pulling force on the machine. To counteract it, out-riggers were placed on each side of the machine to prevent its being turned over by the lift.
The plaintiff’s petition alleges that said unloading was hazardous, incidental to, and growing out of her husband’s employment, and that he lost his life in the discharge of his duty.
The plaintiff claims compensation at the rate of $20.00 per week for 300 weeks.
There is no dispute about the employment, the work, nor the wages, nor as to how her husband lost his life.
The machine while being operated by her husband on April 1, 1927, turned over, fell on him and crushed him to death. Defendant urges that his death and plaintiff’s loss is not compensable for the reason that the out-riggers were to be used as an adequate guard against the accident that happened, and were provided for him
There was judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the compensation prayed for. The defendant appealed.
Plaintiff moved in this Court to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the appeal bond was not sufficient in amount.
As the appellee has not taken the legal steps required by Act 112 of 1916, Secs. 3 and 9, the insufficiency alleged is not good ground for the dismissal of the appeal. Durel vs. Buchanan, 147 La. 804, 86 So. 189.
The evidence shows that the deceased was drinking on the morning that he was killed. He was. seen to take three drinks just previous to the accident, and a bottle said to have contained whiskey was found at the place soon afterwards. The evidence on the subject, however, is not sufficient to establish that deceased was intoxicated at the time. Nevertheless, it is not easy to understand his conduct in operating the machine on which he was working with a seventy-foot boom, without riggers, unless he was under the influence of intoxicating liquor.
The plaintiff contends that the machine overturned as the result of the breaking of a king pin by which it was held down to the flat car on which it was located.
A witness, former employee of defendant, who had worked with, and was familiar with the machine, testified, in his opinion, the accident was caused in that way. But, according to the overwhelming preponderance of witnesses and evidence on the subject, all employees of defendant, but who testify straight-forwardly and seemingly without being influenced, the machine overturned because the out-riggers with which it was equipped had not been set in position. The evidence shows that it was necessary to use them in order to prevent just what happened, when unloading sand and gravel with a bucket of the size that was being used with a seventy-foot boom. These out-riggers were part of the machine. They were there at the time and should have been placed in position by plaintiff’s husband, who, as engineer, was in charge of the work he was doing.
A witness testified that the engineer’s helpers should have set out the riggers of their own accord, and without being told to do so by the engineers, but the overwhelming preponderance of the evidence is to the effect that it was the duty of the engineer to see that these out-riggers were in place when it was necessary to use them in operating the machine.
One of the helpers, seeing that the outriggers should have been set, called to plaintiff’s husband, and asked him to let him place them in position, but he declined to do so, stating that they were not necessary. This helper then forthwith sent a messenger to a higher foreman to notify him that the machine was being operated without riggers; the messenger went and reported the fact, but before the foreman could reach the place, the machine had turned over, crushing plaintiff’s husband to death under it.
The burden of proof to show that it is not liable is on the defendant. It seems to us to have been carried with sufficient certainty, and that under the law on the subject, the plaintiff cannot recover.
The judgment appealed from, is, in our opinion, erroneous, and it must therefore
The judgment appealed from herein, is, for said reason annulled, avoided and set aside, and plaintiff’s demand is now rejected at her cost in both courts.