Beasley v. Bond

1935 OK 651, 48 P.2d 299, 173 Okla. 355, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 626
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 11, 1935
DocketNo. 24425.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 1935 OK 651 (Beasley v. Bond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beasley v. Bond, 1935 OK 651, 48 P.2d 299, 173 Okla. 355, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 626 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

The plaintiff obtained a verdict and judgment of $20y000 againstl the defendants, Jeff Beasley and Muskogee Iron Works, for the death of her husband, whom she alleged lost Lis life by reason of defendants’ negligence.

The deceased was an experienced steel structural worker who was employed by Jeff Beasley, doing business as the Beasley Construction Company. Beasley’s crew of five men were engaged in dismantling and taking down a large steel water tank in Miami, Okla. The bottom of the tank rested some 90 feet above the ground, supported by four fabricated steel supports or legs, which extended slightly outward from the vertical as they approached the ground, somewhat as the four legs of an oil well derrick. The work of dismantling', from the top down, had proceeded to the point where the entire tank and the top section of the tower had been taken apart and lowered, leaving remaining the first two “stories” or “bents” of the tower. These bents, as they are called, are horizontal supporting iron beams, running from leg to leg, and supporting said legs and holding them rigid. The sections of the upright legs appear to have been joined together at the places where the horizontal beams (bents) were fastened onto said legs and to each other.

The work of lowering the various pieces' of material was done by means of an engine hoist, pulleys and a gin pole. Such a gin pole as was here used consists of an ordinary wooden or iron pole, the butt of which is fastened to some supporting portion of the structure, with the pole extending vertically upward. Long guy wires or ropes are fastened to the top of the pole, leading outward and downward at a slight angle, and are fastened to objects such as trees, at a considerable distance; this to steady the pole. For the use of those who are working immediately around the pole they have also a “lazy line,” a piece of rope which can be utilized as an auxiliary means of controlling its position. One or more pulleys are fastened to the top of the pole and through these pulleys there passes a cable. One end of the cable is fastened on the winch or revolving drum, which is operated by the engine on the ground. The other end of the cable is attached to the particular piece of material which is being raised or lowered. The raising or lowering is controlled by the engine.

Shortly before this accident occurred the gin pole was standing vertical on the southwest corner of the remaining portion of the tower. The butt of the pole had been pried off the horizontal girder and was resting in its chain supports some three or four feet below the girder, on the inside of the square formed by the girders, within a few feet of the southwest corner thereof. They were beginning to lower the pole to the next set of girders below, so that when they should get it there they could fasten it upright and use it as a support for the lowering of the pieces of girders from which it had just been removed, and also thei’eby lower the four sections of the legs between those two girders.

An employee by the name of Spillman was perched on the southwest corner of the remaining portion of the structure, 60 feet from the ground. Near him was the gin pole, fastened in its chain moorings just inside of the corner of the framework with .its butt three or four feet below the girders upon which Spillman was sitting. Plaintiff’s husband, Bond, had just walked from said southwest corner, over to the southeast corner, and had taken the lazy line with him and tied it to the east girder. Then Bond took his station on the top of the southeast corner, just across from Spill-man. The evidence shows that at this time the guy rope running from the top of the pole, out to the east, was not in use. The guy rope running to the south was tied to some object about 150 feet away, but no one was handling it. The guy rope running to the north was fastened to some stationary *357 object at its north end and was being bandied by another employee by the name of Easter. Easter had been “riding” this guy line. By “riding” is meant the act of sitting on the rope when it is desired to tighten or take the slack out of said guy line. For instance, should the pole be leaning to the south it could be made vertical by shortening the length of the north guy line, or sitting on the line. The guy line to the west had been tied to a. tree and was being “ridden” by the foreman, Garrett. So the north guy line and the west guy line were being handled by one man each, the south guy line was unmanned, and there was no east guy line. The pole was leaning slightly from the vertical toward the southeast.

It was the custom for the men on top to shout directions to the men on the guy lines. Either Bond, on the top of the southeast corner, or Spillman, on the top of the southwest corner, shouted to Easter, who was on the north guy line, to leave his line and go help Garrett, who was on the west line. Easter left his post on the north line (it being tied) and started to go over and assist Garrett, on the west line. Before he arrived there, however, the line and pole got out of Garrett’s control and the top of it fell in a swinging motion toward the southeast. In the meantime Bond had seen what was happening and had descended the southeast leg, on the outside thereof, far enough that his head was underneath the horizontal girder. Since the butt of the pole was three or four feet lower than the south girder, and on the inside thereof, when the pole fell it struck said girder at a point about four feet from its bottom end. It snapped in two at that place, and the top portion whipped around and struck the leg of the tower at the point wb°re Bond was clinging. Either the pole, or a guy line, or the block and tackle struck him and he fell the 60 feet from that position to the ground, killing him instantly,

The evidence revealed that the gin pole was 25 feet long and had been selected by Spillman and Easter, employees of Jeff Beasley, from a bunch of discarded telephone poles belonging to the electric company in Miami. It formerly had been set in the ground to a depth of about four feet, and that portion had become defective or worm-eaten, and the outside of said bottom four feet had been hewn off by Beasley’s employees. It was at a point on the pole where it had formerly been under ground that it snapped when it struck the girder. Immediately after the accident it was discovered that the west guy line was untied.

We first consider the appeal of the defendant Jeff Beasley, who urges in his first proposition that no act of negligence was proved and that under the undisputed facts there was no jury question in the case. In presenting this proposition the said defendant contends ihat plaintiff was confined under the pleadings to three alleged forms of negligence, and that the evidence did not support either of them. The defendant then proceeds to discuss each of the three issues of negligence and thus endeavor, by the process of elimination, to show that the evidence was insufficient under any theory to support a finding of negligence or to merit any instruction thereon to the jury.

Under this plan of attack, defendant first argues that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain a finding of negligence on the theory that the number of employees provided by the master was insufficient to do the work safely. It appears to us that the defendant is in error in assuming that the plaintiff relied wholly in this connection upon the testimony of M. T.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 651, 48 P.2d 299, 173 Okla. 355, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beasley-v-bond-okla-1935.