American Bridge Co. v. Valente

73 A. 400, 23 Del. 370, 7 Penne. 370, 1909 Del. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMay 24, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 73 A. 400 (American Bridge Co. v. Valente) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Bridge Co. v. Valente, 73 A. 400, 23 Del. 370, 7 Penne. 370, 1909 Del. LEXIS 19 (Del. 1909).

Opinion

Pennewill, J.,

delivering the opinion of the Court:

The defendant in error brought an action in the Court below to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the plaintiff in error.

There is practically no dispute respecting the material facts in the case, and the following statement of the testimony is, we think, sufficient for a proper understanding of the questions raised and argued before this Court.

The American Bridge Company, the plaintiff in error, was at the time of the accident to the defendant in error, engaged in the operation of a plant near Edge Moor, in this State, for the manufacture of bridges and other articles made of structural steel and iron. The plaintiff below was employed by the company as a laborer, at first in digging trenches, and a few days before the accident was engaged in rough painting in and about the shop. A number of large columns,each weighing a ton or a [372]*372ton and a half, had been completed and were ready for loading upon a car. The columns thus completed were painted, except the parts thereof which rested upon the skids, and which could not be painted until the columns were moved.

The floor upon which the columns were resting was about level with the top of the sides of a gondola car into which they were to be loaded, the car itself running on tracks in a depression along the wall of the shop. In order to load the columns, two chain hoists, each running on movable pulleys near the roof of the shop, were employed. The hook connected with each of these two chains hoists was attached to the column where it lay upon the skids. It was then raised by means of the chain hoists to a height sufficient to enable the projections on the columns to pass over the side of the gondola car, and then with two or more men pushing on each end, the column thus suspended was pushed along the movable trolleys, and then loaded into the car. This work was performed by what was known as the “loading gang,” which consisted of a foreman and four laborers, the loading being done under the shipping clerk.

One of the columns had been placed upon the gondola car, and the loading gang were about to place the second column on the car when Valente, the plaintiff, was instructed by the general foreman of the company by signs to go upon the car and with a large brush paint the small places on the first column where it had originally rested on the skids. He was doing this in a kneeling position, with his back turned towards the men who were loading the second column, and in plain view of, and was seen by the members of the loading gang. When the second column had been raised to a sufficient height, the loading gang, two men at each end, pushed the column on the movable trolleys to a position over the car in order that it might be lowered into place. In so doing, one end of the column struck the column in the car knocking it down, and thereby injuring Yalente’s foot which was caught and crushed between the first column and the floor, and so badly injured as to require amputation. The second column remained suspended in the hoists.

[373]*373The plaintiff below could neither speak nor understand the English language. He was a member of a gang composed of Italians who worked under the directions of an Italian boss. He had been so working for about a month and a half prior to his injury, but had not done any painting on iron columns. The company being short of men ordered this Italian boss to send some of his laborers to do some painting, and the plaintiff below was one of the men sent for the purpose. He received no instructions other than by signs from the foreman, and no warning was given him of any danger connected with the work.

Upon the conclusion of the testimony on both sides the Court was asked to instruct the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendant. This request was refused by the Court, and such refusal is assigned as error. It is this assignment of error, and this alone, upon which the plaintiff in error rglies for a reversal of the judgment below,—its contention being that there was no evidence in the case which would warrant the submission of any question whatever to the jury.

The determination of the assignment of error relied upon by the plaintiff in error, necessarily involves a consideration of the following questions:

1. Should the trial Court have submitted to the jury the question, whether the plaintiff below, and his co-employees at the time of the accident, were or were not follow-servants ?

2. If it was the duty of the Court, and not of the jury, to determine the question of fellow-service, then were the plaintiff below and his co-employees—the loading gang—fellow-servants ?

3. Was there any testimony tending to show that it was the duty of the defendant company to instruct the plaintiff respecting the work he was directed to do, and warn him of any dangers incident thereto ?

4. Was there any testimony tending to show that it was the duty of the company to have made and promulgated rules governing the work in which the plaintiff below was engaged?

5. Was there any testimony tending to show that the place in which the plaintiff was ordered to paint the column was an [374]*374unsafe place within the meaning of the law?

No question was raised by the plaintiff below as to suitable and proper appliances, or the sufficiency and competency of fellow-servants. It is not necessary, therefore, for us to consider those matters at all.

Did the Court below err in submitting to the jury the question, whether the loading gang were or were not the fellow-servants of the plaintiff below when engaged in painting the iron column?

We think there can be no difference of opinion respecting the law upon this point. If the facts that are necessary for its determination are not disputed, then clearly it is for the Court to decide and not the jury.

In Labatt on Master and Servant, at Section 494, the rule is stated as follows:

“What servants are in a common employment is not a question of fact exclusively, nor is it solely a question of law. It depends for solution upon both law and fact. But when the necessary facts for determining the question are undisputed, it is then simply a question of law. The Court, therefore, may non-suit the plaintiff, or may direct a verdict for the defendant, or set it aside if rendered for the plaintiff, where the only negligence in evidence is that of a fellow-servant acting in the performance of his duties as a servant.”

And at Section 511, the learned writer continues: “It has frequently been explicitly declared, and is .taken for granted in almost all the cases cited in this chapter, that it is for the Court to say whether or not the negligent employee was a vice principal in every case in which the facts are clearly established, and show precisely what were the respective duties of the plaintiff and the delinquent co-employees, and what relation they bore to one another. Under such cricumstanees, it is error to submit to the jury the question whether the defense of co-service is or is not available.”

Such has been the principle, or rule, upon which the Courts of this State have uniformly acted, and we have known of no excep. [375]*375tion to the rule prior to the present case.

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Bluebook (online)
73 A. 400, 23 Del. 370, 7 Penne. 370, 1909 Del. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-bridge-co-v-valente-del-1909.