Blankenship v. W. E. Cox & Sons

162 S.W.2d 918, 204 Ark. 427, 1942 Ark. LEXIS 81
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 1, 1942
Docket4-6765
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 162 S.W.2d 918 (Blankenship v. W. E. Cox & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blankenship v. W. E. Cox & Sons, 162 S.W.2d 918, 204 Ark. 427, 1942 Ark. LEXIS 81 (Ark. 1942).

Opinion

G-rifein Smith, C. J.

Two causes were consolidated. The appeals are from judgments rendered on jury verdicts for the defendants, partners who operated farms and gins. On behalf of John Blankenship, a minor, it is contended he was employed in violation of Initiative Act No. 1. Pope’s Digest, §§ 9068, 9069, 9071.

The second contention relates to the suit of D. W. Futrell, administrator of the estate of Alfred H. Futrell. It is conceded, there was substantial testimony upon which the triers of facts could have found for or against the defendants as to either plaintiff. Unless instructions were erroneous, the judgments must be affirmed. 1

Alfred Futrell, a cripple, had been employed by W. E. Cox & Sons since 1928. For a number of years he had been general foreman, supervising operations of gins and other machinery. Because of physical impairments it was Futrell’s custom to sit near when men were working and to explain to them how the work should be done. The Cox gin at Fulton was being overhauled. When in service it was driven by a gasoline engine. July 20 and 21 men had been working in the engine room. Alfred Yarbrough testified that late in the afternoon (July 21) he was sent by Ernest Cox to procure five gallons of gasoline for use in cleaning machinery. There is testimony that a tub and bucket were partially filled with the fluid, into which rags were dipped and applied' to the machinery. As a consequence, gasoline dripped to the concrete floor and formed small pools in recesses until the restricted area in which operations were being conducted became permeated.

Yarbrough asserted that Ernest Cox directed the work. Cox testified he had spent part of the day in the engine room, but contended he did not exercise- authority because Futrell was foreman and had charge of the work. An extension cord approximately twenty feet long was utilized in examining the engine. Yarbrough’s explanation of the fire was that insulation had been worn from a four,- five,- or six-inch section of the cord, permitting wires to contact and form a short circuit. The cord, he said, had been frequently dragged over the floor. Yarbrough was looking at the cord — presumably the end to which the light socket was connected — when the flash occurred and the gasoline was set on fire.

John Blankenship had been assisting a painter with outside work, but finished the assignment about thirty minutes before quitting* time. Yarbrough and Blankenship asked Futrell what to do. He directed that they help clean the engine. Futrell was sitting near a door and had been working on a look from a door on Kenneth Cox’ automobile. Blankenship, at the time of trial, weighed 163 pounds, and was six feet and one inch tall. He was paid $1.25 per day.

In testifying regarding the extension cord, Yarbrough asserted that Ernest Cox was present when it was being used, and that the exposed wires were easily seen. This witness also testified: . . the extension cord was on the floor when we began cleaning the engine, under Mr. Cox’s direction. . . . When Mr. Cox was there he was the boss around the engine.”

The inference is clear that the cord belonged to Futrell, or that it was kept by him and carried from place to place for use as occasion might require. Futrell had a chest containing* various tools, in which the cord had been frequently seen. Some of the tools were sent to Mrs. Futrell after her husband died, but the cord-was not in evidence, although witnesses testified to having seen it after the fire. Some were of opinion that the insulation referred to by Yarbrough as having been worn away was destroyed by fire.

Blankenship’s burns confined him to a hospital for three weeks. Medical treatment was required thereafter. Futrell died twenty-six hours after receiving burns.

Instruction No. 6, given on request of the defendants, reflects the trial court’s construction of the law applicable to Futrell: — ‘ ‘ If you find from the evidence that the light extension cord in question was the property of Futrell, then you will find for the defendants in the Futrell ease.”

Objection was that even though the cord belonged to Futrell, it was being negligently used at the time the fire started, and such use was supervised by Ernest Cox. The court was asked to amend the instruction by adding: “Unless you further find that at the time the extension cord was put in use by the deceased, it was defective, or in an unsafe condition.”

There is testimony that it was customary for Futrell to engage employes for Cox & Sons. Also, it is in evidence that Cox & Sons did the hiring and that Futrell’s duties were to superintend. While Yarbrough may be inaccurate in saying Ernest Cox was directing work in the engine room at the time the fire occurred, nevertheless Yarbrough did give testimony to that effect, and he coupled with such testimony the assertion that Futrell was otherwise engaged for perhaps twenty minutes preceding* the‘blaze, and that Cox directed the cleaning process.

It would be formulary to say, as a matter of law, that because of the prevailing custom permitting* Futrell to superintend mechanical operations, responsibility for specific conduct engaged in by employes in the immediate presence of Ernest Cox was deflected in such a way as to clear the partnership and attach to Fntrell— and this upon the theory that if Futrell owned the extension cord there could he no recovery by the administrator. Instruction No. 6 is what is termed “binding”. It closes with the expression, “. . . then you will find for the defendants”. Although evidence strongly indicates the cord was owned by Futrell or was so commonly utilized by him as to justify the presumption that if it were purchased by the Cox partnership, members of the firm were not concerned regarding it, there was no special finding- of ownership. We do not, however, regard this as controlling.

Appellees’ contention is that “.■ . . if the jury found that the . . . cord in question was defective and caused the fire and was the property of Alfred Futrell, and that Futrell was foreman and had charge and was superintending and directing the work, then, in this event, it is a well-settled rule of law that ‘no liability [is] incurred when the employe’s knowledge equals or exceeds that of the employer’ ”.

A flaw in this statement is assumption that the cord was defective when put to use by Futrell the previous day. Also, there is conflict in the testimony reg-arding relative activities of Ernest Cox and Futrell. Result is that a “binding” instruction which omitted essential elements should not have been given; nor could the vice be cured by giving an appropriate instruction.

Was the court in error when it refused to give plaintiff’s requested Instruction No. 1 in the Blankenship case?

Sections 2, 3, and 4 of the law which it is contended controls are copied in the margin. 2 The instruction asked would have told the jury no child under sixteen years of age may be lawfully employed to oil, wipe, or clean machinery or assist “therein or about” in connection with any process in which dangerous or poisonous acids or gases or other chemicals are used. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W.2d 918, 204 Ark. 427, 1942 Ark. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blankenship-v-w-e-cox-sons-ark-1942.