Atchison & Eastern Bridge Co. v. Miller

80 P. 18, 71 Kan. 13, 1905 Kan. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 11, 1905
DocketNo. 13,845
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 80 P. 18 (Atchison & Eastern Bridge Co. v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atchison & Eastern Bridge Co. v. Miller, 80 P. 18, 71 Kan. 13, 1905 Kan. LEXIS 85 (kan 1905).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

At the time the injury complained of

in this litigation was inflicted the Atchison & Eastern Bridge Company was engaged in the erection of false w ork essential to the reconstruction of a bridge across the Missouri river at the city of Atchison. The false work served as a substructure of the old bridge during the dismantling process, of the new bridge as piece by piece it replaced the old one, and of a temporary bridge for highway purposes alongside the bridge proper, over which railway traffic was not interrupted. Many men were employed in many kinds of service. A single superintendent managed the entire work, various branches of which were in charge of foremen w7ho directed the operations of separate squads and gangs. Material was assembled and distributed by skiffs and barges on the river and by cars on the bridge-tracks. Many kinds of tools and much machinery were used and transported from place to place. Piles were driven and braced and capped and a multitude of subsidiary acts performed, all to the ultimate end that the false work might be brought to completion.

Stationary engines w^ere used to hoist material and to drive the piling. These engines were located in the midst of the work, upon the barges, upon the bridge, [15]*15and upon the false work. The plaintiff’s intestate, Miller, was employed as a machinist by the bridge company to repair them, and, in addition, to operate them when necessary. On the first day of his service, while he was engaged in repairing an engine situated on the bridge and only three feet from its north edge, a pile-driver barge moored below him and the crew undertook to drive a pile. It met with an obstruction which rendered it necessary to raise it and resharpen the point. While it was suspended for that purpose, its top towering thirty feet above the floor of the bridge, it fell, and Miller was knocked under the wheels of a passing train, where he received injuries from which he died. His administratrix recovered a judgment against the bridge company, to reverse which this proceeding in error was instituted.

On the trial it sufficiently appeared that the injury was caused by the negligence of a member of the pile-driving crew in fastening the chain used to lift and hold the pile in suspension. The jury, however, returned special findings of fact which raise the question whether the member of the pile-driving crew charged with the duty of adjusting the chain was not a fellow servant of Miller in the general enterprise of constructing the false work. Such findings, arranged as well as they may be to develop the subject, are as follow:

“81. State whether or not the defendant at the time the pile fell was engaged in the undertaking of constructing false work to support the ironwork of the bridge during the progress of reconstruction. A. Yes.
“82. State whether or not, in constructing such false work, stationary engines were used for the purpose of raising and lowering ^timbers and on stationary and barge pile-driver. A/ Yes.
“83. State whether or not Miller was employed to do any necessary work done on the stationary engines used by the defendant, which required attention from a machinist. A. Yes.”
“851/2. If you answer question No. 83 in the af[16]*16firmative, state what, if anything, in addition to work as a machinist, Miller was employed to do. A. Run an engine.”
“106. State whether or not, in the course of practice on that work, men in one crew were interchanged with men in others, in the judgment of the superintendent. A. Yes.”
“84. State whether or not the work which Miller took service to perform would require him to work in and around the places where other men engaged in putting up the false work were at work. A. Yes.
“85. State whether or not the work which Miller took service to perform required him to work in and about places where negligence on the part of other employees engaged in putting in the false work might result in injury to him. A. Yes.”
“24. Was the line of service in which said William I. Miller was employed that of a machinist to repair and keep in order the hoisting-engines and machinery used by the defendant company in the prosecution of its work? A. Yes.
“25. Was the duty and work in which the barge-crew was employed at the time of the injury to said Miller that of operating the machinery upon the barge and hoisting and driving piling in the bed of the Missouri river? A. Yes.”
“14. At the time said William I. Miller, deceased, received the injuries from which he died, was he engaged as a machinist in repairing a hoisting-engine upon the floor of defendant’s bridge? A. Yes.”
“1. Did a pile fall in the direction of and toward William I. Miller, deceased, at the time he received the injury from which he died? A. Yes.”
“15. If you answer question 1 ‘Yes,’ or in the affirmative, then was such pile being raised about ten feet north and east from where said Miller was then at work? A. Yes.
“16. If you answer question 1 ‘Yes,’ or in the affirmative, then was such pile being raised from a barge or boat floating on the river ? A. Yes.
“17. If you answer question 16 ‘Yes,’- or in the affirmative, then was such barge or boat about twenty feet lower elevation than the floor of the defendant’s bridge? A. Yes.
“18. If you answer question 16 ‘Yes,’ or in the af[17]*17firmative, then was such pile raised until the top was about thirty feet higher than the floor of defendant’s bridge? A. Yes.”
“39. State whether or not the engine upon which Miller was working was located about three feet from the north side of the bridge. A. Yes.”
“79. State whether or not Miller was working at the time on the engine within ten or fifteen feet of the pile-driver. A. Yes.
“80. State whether or not Miller, at the time the pile fell, was working where he could see the operations upon the pile-driver. A. Yes.”

These facts are sufficient to enable the court to draw the proper conclusion of law as to the relation of the deceased and the chainman of the pile-driver crew.

Each party to the suit sought the legal opinion of the jury upon certain phases of the controversy. To the plaintiff the jury responded as follow:

“21. Were said William I. Miller, deceased, at the time he received the injury from which he died, and the barge- or boat-crew employed in raising the pile, engaged in different lines of work or employment? A. Yes.
“22. Were the work and duties of said William I. Miller such as to bring him into habitual association with said barge-crew, so that he might exercise an influence upon said barge-crew promotive of proper care and caution, and the line of employment of said barge-crew such that they might exercise an influence upon said Miller promotive of proper care and caution? A. No.
“23.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 P. 18, 71 Kan. 13, 1905 Kan. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atchison-eastern-bridge-co-v-miller-kan-1905.