Bowers v. Mildren

193 P. 318, 107 Kan. 584, 1920 Kan. LEXIS 127
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 6, 1920
DocketNo. 22,565
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 193 P. 318 (Bowers v. Mildren) 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
Bowers v. Mildren, 193 P. 318, 107 Kan. 584, 1920 Kan. LEXIS 127 (kan 1920).

Opinions

[585]*585The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This is an action for damages by an employee against his employer because of injuries sustained through the breaking of a rope on a drilling rig.

The defendant owned a rig for drilling oil wells. He had a foreman in charge of its operations. The plaintiff was employed as a “tool dresser” around and about the machine. Part of the equipment of the machine was a “temper screw” which was hoisted by means of a rope and pulley. At one end of the rope was an iron block which aided in balancing the weight of the screw. When the screw was to be hoisted it was the work of the plaintiff to climb on a post and platform and then add his weight to that of the iron block. In doing this one day the rope broke, causing the plaintiff and the iron block to fall, and the iron fell on his hand and severely injured it.

Plaintiff sued for damages, reciting at length all the pertinent facts, and alleged—

“Defendant, instead of equipping said drilling machine with a wire line or cable to operate said weight with said temper screw, operated said temper screw and iron weight as hereinbefore mentioned and described with a worn, old and rotten rope insufficient in size and strength, and the same had been used by defendant on said drilling rig for a long time— just how long plaintiff does not know — and said defendant knew or with due diligence and inspection of said rope might have known the same was worn, old and rotten and insufficient and impracticable for the use that it was employed and knew or with due diligence, which he failed to exercise, and inspection, which he failed to make, might have known that said rope would break between said weight and temper screw and that said weight would fall to the wooden platform beneath the same if said rope did break, all as hereinbefore mentioned and described; and that said rope did break on account of its size and condition being insufficient and defective, as hereinbefore alleged, as said rope was not strong enough for the purpose for which it was used.”

The defense was a general denial, assumption of risk, accident, and the plaintiff’s own negligence.

Special questions were answered by the jury:

“1. State the period of time the plaintiff has be*en engaged in the occupation of a tool dresser, prior to the injury. Answer: About six years.
“2. Was the plaintiff, at the time of the injury, an experienced tool dresser? Answer: Yes.
[586]*586“3. If you find for the plaintiff, then state in what respect the defendant was negligent? Answer: Did not use proper rope.
“4. Did the plaintiff know, or in the use of ordinary care, should have known, the risks and dangers which he would normally and necessarily incur when he would climb up on the Samson post, catch the rope above the iron weight and throw the weight of his body against the rope to raise the temper screw? Answer: No.
“5. State if it is not a fact that the plaintiff knew about the insufficiency of the weight rope prior to his injury. Answer: No.
“6. Do you find that the rope used by defendant on temper screw and iron weight was insufficient in size and strength ‘for the purpose used, as charged in plaintiff’s petition? Answer: Yes.
“7. If you answer question 6 in the affirmative, then state if its condition was obvious and plain to be seen. Answer: No.
“8. If you answer question 7 in the negative, then state if the respect in which the rope was deficient was not discoverable on examination of it. Answer: No evidence to show the rope was examined.”

Verdict and judgment for $1,250 were rendered for plaintiff.

Defendant assigns various errors, the first being the overruling of his demurrer to the evidence. While the evidence tended to support the material allegations of the petition, the defendant urges that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, and also that he assumed the risk incident to his employment. Granting that there may have been some evidence tending to show the plaintiff’s negligence, that would not justify the termination of this lawsuit on a demurrer. The matter of plaintiff’s contributory negligence was a jury question. (Delaware &c. Railroad v. Converse, 139 U. S. 469.) Every disputed issue of fact in a common-law action between private individuals (Reihl v. Likowski, 33 Kan. 515, 520, 6 Pac. 886) is a jury question, unless a jury is waived. (K. P. Rly. Co. v. Brady, 17 Kan. 380; K. C. Ft. S. & G. Rld. Co. v. Owen, 25 Kan. 419.)

In K. P. Rly. Co. v. Pointer, 14 Kan. 37, 53, it was said:

“It is earnestly insisted by counsel, that the facts in reference to the conduct of the plaintiff (defendant in error), as they appear from the other findings, as well as from the testimony, show that culpable negligence- on his part which will relieve the company from responsibility. It seems to us matter«of great doubt, as we read the conduct of the plaintiff, as narrated either in the findings or the testimony, whether this claim of counsel is not correct, and whether plaintiff was not so negligent as not to be entitled to compensation. And perhaps this doubt is our best justification for upholding the verdict. This question of negligence is said to be a mixed question of law and fact. When the facts are disputed, it [587]*587makes a question for the jury. When the facts are undisputed, and but one deduction is to be drawn from them, there is simply a question of law for the court. But where the facts, though undisputed, are such that when taken singly or in combination different minds will come to different conclusions as to the reasonableness and care of the party’s conduct, the question is one which may properly be left to the determination of the jury.”

The question of the assumption of risk, under the evidence, was also a question for the jury. There was nothing in the evidence to take this question out of the usual rule. It cannot be said that the hazard was so great that a prudent man would have hesitated to swing his weight on the rope, as the plaintiff did when he was injured; he had'been doing that frequently for many days before his injury. “Drilling an oil well is a somewhat rough-and-ready kind of business.” (Burnham v. Stith, 106 Kan. 461, 464, 188 Pac. 246.) Whether before his injury he noticed the defective character of the rope was a subject of sharp controversy, but certainly it was for the jury, not the court, to determine the question of fact involved in that controversy. (Whetzell v. Railway Co., 105 Kan. 289, and citations, 182 Pac. 409.) Nor can it be said that it was the duty of the plaintiff to inspect the rope. The defect was not obvious, as in Barnes v. Akins, 101 Kan. 359, and cases cited, 166 Pac. 474 (finding No. 7), and therefore the plaintiff might confidently rely upon his employer and the foreman to furnish a proper and sufficient rope, and that it would be replaced before it was so much worn as to be dangerous to use.

The demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence was properly overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
193 P. 318, 107 Kan. 584, 1920 Kan. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowers-v-mildren-kan-1920.