Benton v. Finkbine Lumber Co.

79 So. 346, 118 Miss. 558
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 79 So. 346 (Benton v. Finkbine Lumber Co.) 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
Benton v. Finkbine Lumber Co., 79 So. 346, 118 Miss. 558 (Mich. 1918).

Opinion

Sykes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, plaintiff in the court below, filed suit against the Finkbine Lumber Company and certain of its officers for damages for the negligent killing of his son. The declaration contains four counts which practically charge in different language the same cause of action. A demurrer was sustained to the declaration and judgment entered, from which judgment this appeal was prosecuted.

The first count of the declaration and the grounds of the demurrer sustained to it are copied in full, and read as follows:

“L. A. Benton, plaintiff, by his attorneys, brings this, his cause of action, against the Finkbine Lumber Company, J. D. Alexander, J. C. Lovette, and L. L. Ryder, defendants herein, and asks judgment against the said defendants in the sum of fifty thousand dollars and all costs in this behalf expended. Plaintiff avers that his cause of action against the said defendants is this, to wit:

“The said defendant the Finkbine Lumber Company was, on or about the 31st day of July, 1916, and still is, a corporation engaged in operating and carrying on a large saw mill and timber business, located in the town of D’Lo, Simpson county, Miss., and in cutting and manufacturing timber and trees into lumber; that said defendant, on said date, owned and operated, in connection with said mill, a railroad, log road, or [568]*568dummy line, for the purpose of hauling logs and lumber to and from its mill, and it operated on said line of railroad, and still operates thereon, engines and trains of cars propelled by the powerful and dangerous agency of steam; that on or about the said date Spurgeon Benton, an adult unmarried son of the plaintiff, was engaged and employed by said Finkbine Lumber Company as a timber cutter to cut down standing timber for said company, and he was then and there employed by said company to work for it in said capacity in company with a large number of other workmen known as timber cutters; that said Alexander and Ryder, resident citizens of Simpson county, Miss., the said Lovette, a resident citizen of Rankin county, Miss., were then and there employed by said defendant the Finkbine Lumber Company, the said Alexander being the local general manager of said company, and the said L. L. Ryder being the general woods foreman or superintendent of the woods, and the said Lovette being the woods foreman or ‘straw boss’ of the timber cutting crew, in which said Spurgeon Benton was working, as will hereinafter appear; that the timber gang in which said Spurgeon Benton was directed to work was under the immediate management and control of said Lovette, he being then and there, by virtue of his employment with said company, vested with the power and authority to supervise and direct the labors of said Spurgeon Benton and the other timber cutters; that the said defendants Alexander, Ryder, and Lovette were then and there employed by said company to supervise and direct, and did supervise and direct, generally, all of the work of the defendant company, and particularly the work of the said Spurgeon Benton and the other timber cutters; that the said Alexander, Ryder, and Lovette, acting for and on behalf of said company, as aforesaid, were then and there the superior officers of the said Spurgeon Benton, and the other [569]*569members of the gang with which he, the said Benton, was working.

“Plaintiff avers that on or about, to wit, the 31st day of July, 1916, said Spurgeon Benton, acting under his said employment as timber cutter with said ■ company, in Company with said gang of timber cutters, was sent and directed by defendants to go to certain lands upon which was standing timber for the purpose of cutting down said timber for said company. Said Spurgeon Benton,' together with said gang of timber cutters, did, under his employment with said lumber company, go in said capacity on said lands for the purpose of cutting said timber on said date, the said defendant Lovette being then and there present upon the site of said timber directing how it should be cut, and acting under and in pursuance of his employment, as aforesaid, with said lumber company, as the superior officer and one of the directors of the labors of the said Spurgeon Benton and the said gang of timber cutters, the said timber to be cut for said company by said timber cutters under their employment with said company; that said timber was a regular pine forest, the timber therein was then and there standing and was very tall, each tree being from sixty to one hundred feet long, and the trees were close together and thickly situated, one near the other, and there was a thick undergrowth, or many small trees growing under, around, and near said pine trees which were being cut.

“Plaintiff avers that the said Alexander, Ryder, and Lovette, the superior officers of the said Spurgeon Benton, as aforesaid, and under their and the said Spurgeon Benton’s employment with said company, did order said Spurgeon Benton to go, and he, in pursuance of and in compliance with said order, given as aforesaid, in furtherance of his said service to said lumber company, did go, with other members of the gang, to the said timber, and in compliance with said orders began cutting down said timber, and he, the said Lov[570]*570ette, then and there directing the said Spurgeon Benton where he, the said Spurgeon Benton and the other timber cutters, should cut, under his and their employment with said lumber company.

“Plaintiff further alleges that said Lovette, acting as the superior officer of the said Spurgeon Benton and the said timber cutters, under his and their said employment with said lumber company, did negligently, unlawfully, and willfully disregard the safety of the said Spurgeon Benton and the other timber cutters in said gang, and did negligently cause said timber, or a tree thereof, to be cut down and upon said Spurgeon Benton and kill him. Said defendants did then and there negligently order and direct all of said timbers to be cut on the same side of said body of timber in narrow drift, or strip, near the railroad track of the said defendant company, so that said timber could be quickly loaded on cars on the railroad tracks of the said company. The said Lovette negligently ordered and directed all of said timber cutters to cut together and near each other, that is to say, cut almost in the same gang or squad, said timber on one side of said forest, when he (Lovette) knew that cutting timber in this way was highly dangerous, and that felling said timber by such a great number of employees working around and near each other made the place where the timber cutters were situated highly dangerous, and that the said Spurgeon Benton and other timber cutters in said forest would likely be injured by said timber as it was falling; that said Spurgeon Benton and the other timber cutters working together and near each other were placed in this highly dangerous position by the orders of said defendants, and this place was known to said defendants to be an unsafe place, and an unfit place for such a great number of timber cutters, to-wit, about twenty in number, to work in such narrow drifts, or strips, so each other; that two members of the gang cutting together were required to fell a tree, and every time a [571]*571tree would fall there was great danger to the other timber cutters within the reach of the fall of the tree, or trees, in said narrow drifts, or strips, in which said timber cutters were required to cut.

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Bluebook (online)
79 So. 346, 118 Miss. 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benton-v-finkbine-lumber-co-miss-1918.