Batson Hatten Lumber Co. v. Thames

114 So. 25, 147 Miss. 794, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 360
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1927
DocketNo. 26360.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 114 So. 25 (Batson Hatten Lumber Co. v. Thames) 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
Batson Hatten Lumber Co. v. Thames, 114 So. 25, 147 Miss. 794, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 360 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment for damages alleged to have been sustained by the appellee because of the negligence of the appellant.

The appellant is a lumber company, and the appellee was employed by it as foreman of a crew of men whose duty it was to load cars with lumber, and to push trucks loaded with lumber from one part of the appellant’s yard to another. These trucks ran on tracks. The crew assigned to the appellant consisted of six, seven, or eight persons, just which is not clear, .some of whom were boys. On the occasion in question, the appellee, assisted by three *800 members of Ms crew, was pusMng a truck loaded with lumber along a track wMch connected with another track onto which the truck was to be pushed. The truck had a flat wheel, and at the point of connection between the tracks, the one on which the truck was to be pushed was slightly elevated above the other. When the truck struck the elevated track the flat portion of its wheel seems also to have been on the rail, resulting in the necessity for greater effort to move it forward and onto the elevated track. The existence of the flat wheel and of the elevation in the track were known to the appellant.

In addition to the three members of his crew who were assisting him in pushing the truck, the other member thereof was present, but did not assist in actually pushing the truck. Why the others were absent does not appear though they seem to have been in the vicinity.

Under ordinary conditions the number of persons assigned to the appellee was sufficient for pushing the truck, provided they were men of average strength and “pushing*” ability, but, according to his evidencie, the flat wheel and the elevated track necessitated twelve or fifteen men therefor.

In endeavoring to push the truck forward, and onto the elevated track, the appellee says that he “exerted an extraordinary and unusual amount of strength,” resulting in the infliction on him of a rupture or hernia.

The appellee was provided with a “pinch bar to prize these trucks to get them off the flat wheels,” but no use was here made thereof. The evidence seems to indicate that the appellee was under no duty, himself, to push, but only to supervise his crew in so doing. But this fact, if such it is, will be left out of consideration, and we will assume that in assisting in pushing the truck the appellee was discharging one of the duties of his employment.

The court below refused to direct a verdict for the appellant.

There was a former trial of this case which resulted in a judgment for the appellee, and it was appealed to this *801 court and reversed because of the giving of a certain instruction. Thames v. Batson & Hatten Lumber Co., 143 Miss. 5, 108 So. 181. In reversing the case, the court did not consider or decide the right of the appellant to a directed verdict.

Assuming that the appellant was negligent with reference to the flat wheel and the elevation in the track, the question for decision is, was, or could, the jury find that such negligence was the proximate cause of the appellant’s injury?

Three facts enter into a determination of this question: First, The appellee did not use 'the pinch bar, and thereby facilitate the moving of the car; second, he was under no duty to move the truck, unless assisted in so doing by all the members of his crew, assigned to him by the appellant for that purpose; and, third, he was under no duty to put forth any extraordinary effort to move the truck, for “it is the general rule that a servant is the best judge of his own physical strength and in the absence of coercion compelling him to overtax that strength, it is "his duty not to overtax it.” Williams v. Kentucky River Power Co., 179 Ky. 577, 200 S. W. 946, 10 A. L, R. 1396.

We will leave out of consideration the first of these facts, and decide the question on the other two.

It may be that the truck could not have been easily moved had all the members of the crew assigned to the appellee for that purpose assisted him in so doing, but he was under no duty to try to move it without them, and his attempt so to do was a voluntary act on his part without which the injury to him could not have been inflicted. Moreover, the defects in the track and truck and the absence of some of the members of the appellee’s crew were, at most, merely the causa sine qua non of his own injury, but his own imprudence in voluntarily attempting to move the truck under the circumstances and ‘ exerting an extraordinary and unusual amount of strength” in so doing was the causa crnsans, the prox *802 imate cause of his injury, for which he, alone, must be held responsible. ’ •

The judgment will be reversed, and judgment will be here rendered for the appellant.

Reversed, and judgment for the appellant.

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Related

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180 So. 800 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
114 So. 25, 147 Miss. 794, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/batson-hatten-lumber-co-v-thames-miss-1927.