Boyle v. Coast Improvement Co.

151 P. 25, 27 Cal. App. 714, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 147
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 21, 1915
DocketCiv. No. 1345.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 151 P. 25 (Boyle v. Coast Improvement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyle v. Coast Improvement Co., 151 P. 25, 27 Cal. App. 714, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 147 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

*716 HART, J.

This is an action by the administrator of the estate of Patrick O’Donnell, deceased, to recover as damages the sum of fifteen thousand dollars for the alleged wrongful and negligent act of the defendants in causing the death of the plaintiff’s intestate.

The charging part of the complaint reads: “That, on the 14th day of December, 1911, and at the same time and place, defendants, through their agents, servants and employees, were operating a derrick or hoist for the purpose of lowering a water pipe by means of a chain into the trench hereinbefore mentioned in which said Patrick O’Donnell was engaged in digging; that on said date and at said time and place and through the carelessness and negligence of the defendants in the operation of said hereinbefore mentioned hoist or derrick, the pipe which was being lowered by defendants, its agents, servants, and employees, was permitted to swing on the chain connected with said hoist so that said pipe struck without any warning whatever said Patrick O’Donnell while he was engaged in his work in the trench hereinbefore mentioned, inflicting serious and violent injuries upon his head, which resulted in his death within a few hours’ time.”

A demurrer upon both general and special grounds was interposed to the complaint by the defendants and overruled by the court.

The facts, gathered from the evidence, generally stated, are these: The Coast Improvement Company, a corporation, was, in the year 1911, engaged in the performance of a contract between it and the city of San Francisco providing for the construction of an auxiliary water system for fire protection for said city. In the execution of the terms of said contract the said defendant, at the time of the accident whereby the plaintiff’s intestate lost his life, was engaged in laying a water pipe across Market Street at a point where Van Ness Avenue intersects with or runs into said street, and for that purpose had caused to be dug a ditch or trench in or under Market Street. This trench was about thirty feet in length, three feet in width and seven feet in depth. The first six feet of said trench was open or without cover, the purpose of that condition being to admit air and light into the tunnel. By means of this open space entrance into and exit from the trench were effected. For a distance of twelve feet the trench was bridged or covered in such manner as to allow the *717 passage of vehicles over the same. From that point on to the end of the trench, a distance of approximately fourteen feet, the trench was open and it was into this part of the ditch that the pipes which were being laid were lowered.

At the time of the accident the work of laying the pipes was under the direct supervision of one 0 ’Callaghan, who was the construction company’s foreman, and under him were several laborers, who were assisting in the work, among whom was the deceased, and all of whom, with the exception of the latter, were employed on the surface of or above the street and near or alongside the open space of fourteen feet. The pipes were lowered by means of a derrick and the duties of the laborers referred to (except O’Donnell) were to manipulate the derrick and thus lower the pipes into the trench.

The duties of O’Donnell in the trench were to sponge the pipe—that is, to prevent dirt or other refuse from getting or remaining in the pipe—to level it and adjust it to the pipe already laid.

Running through the center of the trench was a large iron pipe of the Spring Valley Water Company, said pipe being located about six feet from the opening through which the pipes were being lowered into the trench by the construction company and about four feet above the surface of the trench. It was necessary to run the pipes which were being lowered into the trench underneath the Spring Valley pipe.

The method by which the pipes were lowered into the trench was to fasten a chain around the center of the pipe and, by operating the derrick with which the chain was connected, gradually lower it to the bottom of the trench, and, then, the pipe having reached the bottom, and upon a plank or carriage, give a warning to O’Donnell (who was inside the tunnel or covered portion of the trench) and then put on what is described or called the “home puli’’ or strain, whereby the pipe was driven with sufficient force to carry it underneath the tunnel or to its proper place in the trench. The warning to O’Donnell was for the purpose of notifying him of the “home puli’’ and thus enabling him to prepare against collision with or being struck by the pipe.

At the time of the accident the workmen on the surface of the street were engaged in the act of lowering into the trench, by means of the derrick, a twelve-foot cast-iron pipe; It is difficult to say whether the pipe went into the trench in a ver *718 tical position or on an incline, the usual way, the testimony of the witnesses not being clear upon that point. But, in any event, before the pipe had settled at the bottom of the trench or on the carriage used to slide it along, the workmen at the derrick, without (so there is testimony tending to show) any warning having been previously given O’Donnell, who, as seen, was in the trench and within the tunnel and out of sight of the men engaged in lowering, put on the “home pull’ or strain with such tremendous force that it sent the pipe into the trench with unusual and violent speed. Within two or three minutes thereafter O’Donnell came staggering out of the trench through the six-foot opening, with blood profusely flowing from his ears and nose, and was thereupon and at once removed to a hospital, where, from the effects of a fractured skull, he died within an hour and a half after his removal thereto.

An autoptical examination of the body of the deceased disclosed that he had suffered a basal fracture of the skull and that death was the result of hemorrhage due to such fracture.

There was no other person in the trench at the time of the accident than the deceased, and, manifestly, there was available no testimony disclosing precisely how the accident happened, and consequently none introduced.

The witnesses, Farrington, Mulcahy, and Sweeney, who were at the time and had been for some days previously employed on the work, and whose duties had to do with the hoist or derrick and the lowering of the pipes from the surface of the street into the trench, each testified that it was the general custom, just before the “home pull” was put on, for the foreman to warn or signal the deceased that that act was to be done, but that no such warning was given O’Donnell just immediately preceding the act of shooting the pipe underneatli the ditch by the strain or ‘home pull” or at any time before the performance of that act.

These witnesses went into the trench immediately after 0 ’Donnell appeared wounded and bleeding, on the surface of the street, and they testified that the pipes—the Spring Valley and the pipe which had just been lowered—had large quantities of blood upon them. They found the hat of O’Donnell lying on the Spring Valley pipe.

At the close of the plaintiff’s case the defendants made and the court granted a motion for a nonsuit, and this appeal is *719

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 P. 25, 27 Cal. App. 714, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyle-v-coast-improvement-co-calctapp-1915.