Apodaca v. Allison

258 P.2d 711, 57 N.M. 315
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1953
DocketNo. 5525
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 258 P.2d 711 (Apodaca v. Allison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Apodaca v. Allison, 258 P.2d 711, 57 N.M. 315 (N.M. 1953).

Opinions

LUJAN, Justice.

This is an action for additional compensation for the alleged failure of the defendants, Allison & Haney, to supply reasonable saftey devices in general use in the work in which they were engaged for the protection of their employees at the time of the injury suffered by decedent causing his death. The verdict was in favor of the plaintiff, and from the judgment entered thereon, the defendants have appealed.

For some five weeks prior to the happening of the accident on 16th day of August, 1950, resulting in decedent's death, the defendants, Allison & Haney, had been engaged in laying a sewer line in the streets of the City of Albuquerque.. The line began at the sewage disposal plant on South Second Street and had been completed up. to East Central Avenue and North Edith, a distance of 7000 feet, or 1*4 mile. In the immediate neighborhood of where the work was being done the ground is sandy. The Southern Union Gas Company’s main and service gas lines which are laid 3 feet below the surface, run 7 feet directly over where the sewer line was installed. The sewer trench was dug, and the pipe was so laid that the bottom of it was about 11 feet below the surface of the ground. The pipe was about 2% feel in diameter and was made in joints of reinforced concrete. Seven thousand feet of pipe had been laid down and covered with dirt and paved. At this-point four joints of pipe were connected with the completed 7000 feet of sewer line, dirt had been thrown back into the trench and the ground tamped up to 2 feet from the surface, but the inside joints had not been caulked.

On the morning of August 16, 1950, the plaintiff’s husband, an employee of Allison & Haney, a copartnership, took an electric lantern, a bucket of mortar and a pair of rubber gloves and entered the sewer pipe to Caulk the joints. He had worked about two hours and was inside of the pipe at a point approximately 16 feet from the mouth of the open trench where he entered when an explosion occurred and he was injured, from which injuries he later died.

In her complaint she alleged that she was entitled to fifty percent. (50%) additional compensation because the death of her husband resulted from the failure of the employers, Allison & Haney, to provide the safety devices required by law and the negligence of said employers in failing to supply reasonable safety devices in general use for the use or protection of workmen. In its answer the defendants denied the allegations of the complaint.

The plaintiff introduced evidence showing that the deceased entered the sewer pipe as above stated; that an explosion occurred; that he was injured and that as a result thereof died. She also introduced evidence to the effect that about two weeks prior to the explosion gas leaks were discovered in the gas service lines close to the sewer trench and that the same had been repaired; that two or three gas leaks had been repaired along the line as the work progressed; that there is always a chance of service lines leaking; that leakages in service lines often occur from poor connections, couplings or rotted pipes; that in a pipe line such as the one in question, 7000 feet long, the air would be low in oxygen content because of little circulation with an opening of 30 inches at one end; that there were two explosions, one followed immediately another; that a few hours after the explosion a test was made and explosive gas was found inside the sewer pipe; that an air compressor was installed and used to free the entire length of the sewer line from gas; that after using said compressor for two hours gas was still registering in the pipe for a distance of three or four blocks from the end of the pipe; that the compressor was then used for another six hours or until the entire sewer line had been freed from gas; that the explosion was of such force that it blew off the lid from a manhole approximately 500 feet away from where the deceased was killed; that the Southern Union Gas Company’s main gas pipes contained natural gas and extended along north and south Edith Street, and that from the main gas line service pipes are led over and across the sewer line to its customers; that the service pipes were disconnected as encountered to allow the power shovel of defendants, Allison & Haney, to dig the trench for laying the sewer pipes; that they were then reconnected, the gas turned on and the trench refilled with dirt and tamped down.

The proof further showed that there are gas indicators manufactured and available for use in underground work; that they are in use by some employers engaged in underground work in Albuquerque; that these indicators are used where the presence of inflammable and explosive gases is known or suspected in any enclosed area because it is not good practice to depend on sense of smell; that they will detect any kind of gas whether it can be smelled or not; that there are also air compressors manufactured and available for blowing out gases which have accumulated in an enclosed area; that if a gas indicator had been used here it would have shown the presence of gas in dangerous volume in the sewer pipe and the use of an air compressor would have eliminated such gas; that employers engaged in work of the kind decedent was doing at time of his. death, underground work, use both gas indicators and air compressors where the presence of gas is suspected.

At the end of plaintiff’s case the defendants moved for a directed verdict. The court denied the motion and thereupon the defendants proceeded to put on their case.

They tendered testimony of the custom and usage followed by other contractors in the construction of “open” sewer lines. They also presented testimony tending to question the existence in general use by employers engaged in underground work of any safety device of the kind and nature here shown in evidence calculated to disclose and eliminate dangerous, explosive gases. As indicated by what has been said, however, much of their testimony related to construction of “open sewers” or excavation work of that nature. That the trial judge, himself, sensed the decedent was engaged in “underground” work, is demonstrated by the fact that, upon objection, he compelled the reframing by defense counsel of hypothetical questions to accord with the demonstrated fact that this was “underground” and not “open sewer” construction, especially in so far as it applied to the work being done by plaintiff’s decedent.

Defendants contend that the court erred in overruling their motion, interposed at the close of plaintiff’s case in chief to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that the claimant had failed to prove that the injury of claimant’s decedent was proximately caused by employers’ negligence in failing to provide safety devices in general use in the industry in which the employer and employee were engaged. When that motion was overruled, defendant waived its objection to the action of the court, by aft-erwards introducing evidence in their behalf. They did not renew their motion at the close of the entire case, consequently we will not review this assignment of error. State v. Analla, 34 N.M. 22, 276 P. 291; State v. Stewart, 34 N.M. 65, 277 P. 22; Salazar v. Garde, 35 N.M. 353, 298 P. 661; Crocker v. Johnston, 43 N.M. 469, 95 P.2d 214.

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Bluebook (online)
258 P.2d 711, 57 N.M. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/apodaca-v-allison-nm-1953.