163 Ky. 84 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1915
Affirming.
Todd Rogers was 17 years of age and above tbe average in development and intelligence, as well as willingness to serve. He was in the employ of appellee, and, on the morning of February 19th, 1913, shortly after he reached the plant for duty, he was missed by his associate employes, and, after a search, his remains were found at the bottom of a huge bin completely covered by the crushed stone contained in it. Whether he was suffocated or his neck broken is a matter in dispute, but it is not very material which. In this action to recover damages for his death the court peremptorily instructed the jury to find a verdict for the appellee, his employer, and the administrator appeals.
Appellant, by his. pleadings, sets up numerous acts and conditions of negligence on the part of appellee. Among them are, that the boy was ordered and directed to get into the bin in which his body was found; that it was defectively constructed and was a place of danger, and the boy was ignorant of it; that the walkway over the top of the bin was dangerous and unsafe; that the appellee negligently failed to provide a ladder or steps for employes to use in descending.into the bin; that the crushed rock and clay were more or less heated and gave forth dangerous gases and fumes; in the alternative it is alleged that the boy came to his death while attempting to descend into the bin pursuant to orders and in the discharge of his duties, or that he fell from the unsafe walkway, or he fell on account of the unsafe means of access to the bin, or was overcome by the gases. By an amended petition, it is claimed the boy was young and inexperienced and Ms employer negligently failed to warn him of the danger of going into the bin, and that it was negligent in directing him to go into it under the circumstances. But, on the trial, appellant’s efforts were exerted almost wholly in the attempt to show that it was customary for employes to go into the bin to relieve a clogged condition whenever it occurred, and that the boy went into it in obedience to custom, or to directions then given, and that it was a dangerous and unsafe place for the boy, but the dangers were not obvious or apparent to one of his experience.
The contention of appellant is that the proof showed the above state of facts as being the direct and proxi
The appellant has a large cement mill and operates it day and night with a force of from 100 to 150 employes. The boy began work seven or eight months before his death, and was employed at the request of his father. ITis duties consisted of dumping cars and regulating the discharge from a screw conveyor into the bin' in question, and his place of work was on a platform some 30 or 40 feet from the ground floor. Prom this platform a mixture of clay and limestone crushed to egg size was fed into ball mills. These ball mills were long cylindrical revolving machines, partially filed with hard round flints or balls. The material being fed into the mills from the platform, and traveling through their length, is pulverized to pea size, and smaller, by the constantly revolving cylinders and hammering effect of the balls. Before going into the ball mills the material was-mechanically dried, and this, together with the friction of the balls, generated some heat, but the proof shows the material, as it was dropped into the big bin, could be held bare-handed without discomfort. The fine material was automatically discharged into a bin at the foot of the ball mills and then elevated by means of a screw conveyor which reached from the' ball mill bin back up to the platform, and thence longitudinally across a large steel bin built alongside the platform. This, latter is. the bin in which the boy was found. It is ten feet wide, twenty feet long, and seventeen feet deep. The walls of the upper ten feet are smooth and perpendicular. The lower part is divided into six hoppers with sloping sides, seven feet deep, so that from the outside the. bottom part of the bin has a saw-edge appearance with the saw teeth seven feet long. Prom the bottom of each of these six hoppers eight inch spouts, lead to as many fuller mills, and the pea size material, which has been elevated and discharged into this big bin, automatically feeds through these spouts into the several fuller mills for still further pulverization; that is, to the consistency of ordinary commercial cement. There is an incline track leading up to the platform from a point on the outside where the crushed rock and clay in proper proportions are loaded into cars. A hoisting engine on top of the
We understand that the capacity of the ball mills is such that in a day shift they crush sufficient material to run the fuller mills a day and night shift.
Rogers was last seen at the point on the outside where the mixture was loaded into the cars. His associate, Allgood, was there cleaning material away from the track which had been spilled in loading, cars. It was 10 or 15 minutes before the day shift went on that morning, and Rogers came by with a friendly greeting. Soon after-wards, when Allgood went upon the platform to start the ball mills he missed Rogers. His shoes were there; that is, he had apparently come upon the platform and changed shoes. Allgood started the search; called the foreman and others. Looking over into the large bin they could see nothing out of the ordinary; going down on the lower floor, they found fuller mill No. 5 was not feeding, and taking off the spout leading from the hopper they discovered his feet protruding. Enough of the material was made to immediately flow out of the big bin to lower the surface seven or eight inches and leave his head exposed. Recovering his body, efforts were made to revive him, but without avail. The hoe with the three-foot handle was found alongside his body and covered with the material. There is not one scintilla of proof that fuller mill No. 5 was not feeding when the boy came to the plant or that there was any trouble in the feed at all until it was obstructed by his body. There is no proof that there was any occasion for anyone going into the bin, or that the boy was directed by anyone to go into it or ta do anything with reference to it. Neither is there any proof that during any of the time the boy worked there that it was customary for the employes to go into the bin. No one saw him fall in or attempt to climb into it. There is no proof of any noxious or dangerous fumes arising from the material; on the contrary, the proof shows that nothing came from it more than dust arising from the ordinary process of crushing limestone. The walkway over the bin was not broken or defective; it was the same walkway that had been in use ever since the boy was employed. There is no proof to show that it was at all dangerous. On one side of it was the screw conveyor box, 22 inches high, which served as
The question for us to consider is, whether there was evidence that his death was caused by the negligence of his employer. After a careful consideration of the record, we concur with the lower court in the opinion that there is a total failure of proof in this regard.
Appellant did introduce one witness, a brother of the decedent, who said that when he worked there the walkway over the bin was nothing more than a plank six inches wide. His evidence is not corroborated by any witness and he admits that he is testifying with reference to the time when he worked at the mill, and that was more than a year before the accident occurred. All of the witnesses, both for appellant and appellee, show that the walk at and from the time the boy was employed was made of two 2x12 inch planks, with one inch space between. The father of deceased and another brother, and perhaps one other witness, testified that when they worked at the plant — from two to four years before the accident — they had seen employes go down into the bin, and on one or more occasions had gone into the bin themselves. They say they went in there to relieve the clogged condition of the fuller mills, but their evidence shows that they were volunteers. They do not pretend to know anything of conditions or customs since their employment ceased. This is the only evidence to support appellant’s theory that it was customary for the employes to go into the bin, and none of it had reference to the time after the boy was employed. These witnesses also show that the only way to go down was to procure a rope and drop it over the side, and climb down it, or else swing down from some brace rods which run through, the bin and were at least seven feet apart. In other words, a. man of less ' reach than seven feet could hardH use the rods for that purpose, unless the bin was half full. On the occasion in question there is no evidence of a rope having been
The circumstances of his death are particularly sad, for there is little doubt that he was attempting some service which he thought would redound to the interest of his- master; but, at most, he was a volunteer and had no special orders. The tools and appliances he had to work with were simple, and such dangers as were incident to their use were necessarily well understood by him.
Appellant insists that the witnesses did not give his side of the ease the benefit of the whole truth. In other words, he believes, if the truth were known, it would show that the boy was specially directed to go into that bin and relieve the clogged condition of spout No. 5. He thinks that when the boy passed by a fellow-workman on his way to the platform, that this workman, the man in charge of .these fuller mills, told him of the defective feed at No. 5, and asked him to go in the bin to relieve the condition. He argues that this position is sustained by the fact that the searchers almost immediately went to mill No. 5 and found no feed going into it. But the proof as to no feed at mill No. 5 shows nothing more than such a condition existing at the time the boy was found, and the presence of his body in the spout obstructing the feed. This man in charge of the fuller mills was an Italian, who could neither understand nor speak English. He was present at the trial and the Italian consul was there to interpret for him, but neither side saw fit to introduce him as a witness. But the proof does show that he had no authority to direct the work of any employe, and, as we have already indicated, there is absolutely no proof that he even attempted to do so.
Appellant relies upon the case of Moseley’s Admr. v. Black Diamond Coal Co., 109 S. W., 306. This was'where a night engineer fell into a mine shaft unobserved by anyone. His regular place of work was 60 feet away.
Neither can we find any analogy in the case of the Standard Oil Co. v. Eiler, 22 Ky. L. R., 1641, or in the case of Southern Ry. Co. v. Mouck, 152 Ky., 498, relied on by appellant. In the Eiler case, a seventeen-year-old boy was left in charge of a grinding mill without any instructions as to its use or operation, or warning as to danger that would attend an effort to -unchoke a spout through which it discharged the material. In trying to relieve that condition he took off the spout and ran his fingers up in the mill to loosen the material, and they
The principle of law applicable to and decisive of this case is stated in C. & O. v. Walker’s Admr., 159 Ky., 237, as follows:
“Where the circumstances attending the injury show nothing as to real cause, but leave it to conjecture as to whether it was the negligence of the master or the fault of the injured servant or unaccountable accident, there is a failure of proof.”
We do not believe this case is as strong for appellant even as the Walker case, because there is no proof of any negligence upon the part of the master.
For the reasons indicated the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.