Allen Gravel Co. v. Curtis

161 So. 670, 173 Miss. 416, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 218
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1935
DocketNo. 31678.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 161 So. 670 (Allen Gravel Co. v. Curtis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen Gravel Co. v. Curtis, 161 So. 670, 173 Miss. 416, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 218 (Mich. 1935).

Opinion

Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment for seven thousand dollars against the appellant in favor of the appellee for an injury to the appellee, Curtis, received in the employment of the appellant, resulting in silicosis and tuberculosis. Appellant, the Allen Gravel Company, owns a gravel pit in Tishomingo county, Mississippi, and has, for a number of years, been engaged in mining and shipping gravel to be used principally in the construction of roads and other purposes for which gravel is used. In the early part of 1930, the Allen Gravel Company installed a rock-crushing machine to crush rock too large to be used in road construction. The rock to be crushed was picked up by a steam shovel and dropped into a hopper above the crusher and went down through the mouth of the machine into the crusher. The rock, after being crushed, was carried by an endless chain and dumped into cars for shipment. Curtis, for a number of years, had been an employee of the Allen Gravel Company. During the year 1930, from about the 1st of April to November, he worked practically all the time at the rock-crushing machine and usually was in the cab where the rock went into the machine to be crushed, for the purpose of seeing that no iron or other foreign substances got into the machine. This cab was ten or twelve feet square, and eight or ten feet high, and had a door and two windows in it. During the dry times when the machine was being operated, large quantities of dust were created by the crushing of the rock, and those who worked around this machine, inelud *422 ing Curtis, the appellee, naturally had their eyes affected thereby, and the breathing of this dust also affected the mouths and noses of the employees. After Curtis had been working there a few months he developed a cough and experienced pains in his chest. He finally procured medical attention and abandoned the particular employment, but continued in the service of the company in another capacity. However, he gradually grew worse, and the physician diagnosed his condition as tuberculosis brought on by silicosis, and the physicians familiar with silicosis testified that it was a disease brought on by breathing large quantities of silica over a period of years, but sometimes developing in a much shorter time, and in fact there were cases where it had been contracted in less than a year. Curtis’ lungs showed clearly the presence of silica in large quantities. The testimony was to the effect that this could be discerned by X-ray pictures.

The assignment of error here is that there was insufficient testimony to sustain the verdict, and it is argued that the appellant and the appellee had equal opportunities to know and to judge of the effect of the dust upon the lungs.

The appellee offered the former manager of the appellant to show that the appellant had a chemical analysis made of the silica in the gravel, and that it contained eighty-eight per cent silica. The former manager testified that it was sent to a reputable chemical company, and that said company sent a report of its finding of silica, but the court, on objection, excluded this because they did not produce the man who made the analysis to- testify that it was properly and accurately made.

There was also testimony on the part of the appellee showing that there was a simple appliance called a respirator which, if furnished to the employees and used by them, would- prevent their breathing the dust, and *423 that this appliance could be purchased for two dollars and fifty cents and could be kept in condition at the nominal cost of approximately one cent a day.

There was no testimony showing that this appliance was used in the vicinity of the gravel plant, but the method of protecting employees engaged in similar work at other points was shown. The proof showed that the respirator could be used; that it was a safety device and was used at other points; and that there were also other appliances to blow the dust away from the employees, which materially reduced the hazards.

There is nO' dispute, as we understand it, as to silica dust being a dangerous agency when breathed into the human system, and as to its having been investigated and studied by numerous medical authorities, and by the United States government, and reports published which are available upon that subject. The manager testified that he did not know the effect of breathing silica and paid no attention thereto, or words to that effect.

The rule is that the master must use reasonable care to provide a safe place for his employees to work. He is not an absolute insurer of the safety of the place, nor is he required to use the highest degree of care, but he should take reasonable precautions to make the place of work reasonably safe.

In the recent ease of Benjamin v. Davidson-Gulfport Fertilizer Co., 169 Miss. 162, 152 So. 839, we dealt with a character of work slightly different from the case at bar. There a person was employed to unload a car of phosphate and dump it into a mixing pit, and the unloading caused a thick cloud of dust which was inhaled by the appellant to such an extent that it caused him to have bronchial pneumonia resulting in his death. One of the counts charged failure of the appellee to furnish deceased with a respirator to protect him from breathing this dust, and the other count was based on the failure of the ap *424 pellee to furnish the deceased with a reasonably safe place to work. The court there held that it was a questio-n for the- jury on the facts of that case as to whether there- was negligence resulting in the appellant’s death, or whether the appellee knew, or with reasonable care, should have known, that inhaling such dust was injurious, and that the furnishing of a respirator would have prevented the injury.

In the case of American Sand & Gravel Co. v. Reeves, 168 Miss. 608, 151 So. 477, it was held that a master is charged with knowledge of ordinary dangers to which employees are exposed, and with knowledge of constituents and nature of substances used in his business.

In the case at bar, the appellee testified that he did not know of the dangers peculiar to- silica dust until he secured medical advice, and that, upon being advised that it was dangerous, he thereupon abandoned that particular employment.

In 39 C. J., page 490(, sec. 604, it is stated that, “The master’s liability in respect of warning and instructing his servant depends upon his knowledge, actual or constructive, of the defect or danger to which his servant was exposed, and negligence cannot he imputed to- him unless he knew, or ought, in the exercise of reasonable and ordinary care and diligence, to have known, that a warning was necessary. . . . Regarding the duty to warn employees of' the hazards of the work, the master is charged with knowledge of the usual and ordinary dangers and hazards to- which he- is exposing his employees and is hound to know the normal condition of his premises, and to know of the. nature of the constituents and general characteristics of the substances used in his business, so that he can give directions for the conduct thereof with ordinary safety to his servants performing the work with ordinary care; and particularly is the master chargeable with a knowledge of risks as *425

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Bluebook (online)
161 So. 670, 173 Miss. 416, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-gravel-co-v-curtis-miss-1935.