Brown v. Orleans Gravel & Sand Co.

64 So. 903, 134 La. 1045, 1914 La. LEXIS 1700
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 16, 1914
DocketNo. 19,818
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 64 So. 903 (Brown v. Orleans Gravel & Sand Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Orleans Gravel & Sand Co., 64 So. 903, 134 La. 1045, 1914 La. LEXIS 1700 (La. 1914).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

MONROE, J.

Plaintiff sues for damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of the death of her husband, and of the failure of defendant to return his body to New Orleans for burial; the facts of the case being as follows, to wit:

Defendant, having occasion to deliver a lot of piles and other heavy pieces of timber at a place or point called Burwood, on the Mississippi river, some five miles above its mouth, entered into a contract with Winston, a stevedore, to land them from the barges in which they were carried down the river; the expectation being that the work would be done by hand, and the agreed price being $150 for the unloading of three barges, Winston to furnish his own labor. Winston was accompanied, on his visit to defendant’s office, by the decedent, Orange Brown, who appeared to be interested with him, and Brown engaged seven men, who, with him as foreman, were sent down from New Orleans to the scene of operations. It was then found that the piles could not be landed by hand, and defendant chartered a floating derrick to assist in the work; the idea conveyed by the testimony being that the derrick was operated as an apparatus employed by defendant, and the record being silent as to any modification in the contract with Winston which may have resulted from its employment. The derrick boat being moored at a distance of about 35 feet from the river bank, the barge to be unloaded was brought alongside, skids, consisting of piles 50 or 60 feet long, were extended to the bank, and the unloading was effected by swinging the boom of the derrick over the barge, picking up the piles, one at a time, swinging the boom, with the pile suspended from its end, around to the left, until it reached the skids, upon which it was let down and released. There were four men in the barge whose duty it was to fasten the chain tackle hanging from the end of the boom to the pile, and tell the engineer of the derrick when to hoist, and the other four, including Brown, were stationed on the bank to disengage the tackle from the piles and arrange the latter in order by means of their-cant hooks. The work had been going on for seven or eight days, and several hundreds of' piles or timbers had been unloaded, when the accident by which Brown lost his life occurred, as follows: The men in the barge-had fastened the tackle to a pile, and had called to the engineer to hoist, which he did; and the pile was lifted from the barge and swung around to the shore by the boom; but,, in the course of that movement, the butt end went down and the point up, and, whilst the pile was in that position, the chain tackle-by which the point end was sustained became detached, according to plaintiff’s theory, from the end of the boom, according to defendant’s theory, from the pile, and, the-point' dropping suddenly, the pile shot forward and downward, struck Brown, and killed him.

The allegations of the petition which attribute fault or negligence to defendant in the matter of the accident read as follows:

“That, when her said husband was working-on the bank, rolling the piling that had already been deposited on the -bank, a large heavy pile was taken up by the derrick and hoisted off the barge and swung over the bank, when, through the defective tackle, one end of the pile fell and struck her husband and'killed him, the other end of the pile being swung in the air; that the said pile would be hooked with two large hooks, at points equidistant between - the middle * * * and either end, each hook being attached to a strong wire, or hemp, rope, 10 or 15 feet in length, at the end of which was a smaller hook, which would be hooked into an iron ring, fastened to the main tackle that did the hoisting; that these smaller hooks were-left unprotected, without any mousing or other-safety appliances to prevent them from jumping out of the ring; that one of them jumped out of' [1049]*1049the ring, thereby causing one end of the pile to fall, the other end being suspended by the •other hook, and the end that fell struck petitioner’s husband and killed him.”

Opinion.

The testimony places it beyond dispute that the tackle by which the piles were attached to the derrick consisted of two chains (not wire, or hemp, rope) weighing about 110 pounds each; and, from our reading of the testimony, we infer that, instead of their being “in the end of each chain a smaller hook, which would be hooked into an iron ring fastened to the main tackle,” there was, at the end of each chain, a ring or link, whereby the chain was hung upon a large hook 4y2 to 5 inches deep, which was attached to a block weighing between 40 and .50 pounds, which, in turn, was attached to the main tackle at the end of the hoom. The evidence satisfied the trial judge, and satisfies us, that, with a pile weighing, say, 2,900 pounds suspended, in the manner described in the petition, from the lower ends of the chains, the upper end of one of the chains was not likely to have jumped out of the hook; and, moreover, there is direct evidence to the effect that it did not do so, though there is some conflict in the testimony upon that point. Counsel for plaintiff say, in their brief:

“The accident that resulted in plaintiff’s [ ?] death happened in the following manner: * * * The engineer of the derrick would swing the boom outward, over the barge upon which the piling was loaded, and the men on the barge would fasten the two ends of a chain that hung from a large hook to the pile, at a point equidistant from the middle of the pile.”

If, however, there was but a single chain hung by the middle over the single hook, it would seem to be all the more improbable that it should rise 4 or 5 inches out of the hook, so long as the ends were held down by an object weighing nearly a ton and a half. But defendant’s superintendent, in his testimony, speaks distinctly of two chains, and says that each of them weighed about 110 pounds, and there is other testimony which leaves no doubt that there were two chains.

The failure of the plaintiff to prove the negligence alleged in the petition would ordinarily be the end of the case, but there was considerable testimony adduced, without objection, as to the duty of the engineer of the derrick in the matter of keeping a lookout for the safety of the men whilst operating that apparatus, and as to the manner in which he discharged that duty; and plaintiff’s counsel is of opinion that it has been proved that, but for the engineer’s negligence, the accident would not have happened. We are unable to concur in that view.

It is beyond dispute that the men were warned generally and repeatedly that the work was dangerous, and specifically that they must be on the lookout for the piles; and it is also beyond dispute that, whilst there was no sound from the derrick so long as nothing was being done, the moment the engine was started, and the tackle, by which the piles were lifted from the barge, began to tighten, the exhaust of the steam and the rattle of the machinery produced a noise which could be heard for hundreds of yards, and which no one in the vicinity could help hearing. It is true, upon the other hand, that, while it was the duty of the men to keep a lookout for the piles, it was also the duty of the engineer to keep a lookout for the mep; and the evidence shows that, even though a pile had been lifted from the barge, and was swinging in the air, and the men had received notice, by means of the noise, he would stop the' engine if he found that they were engaged in placing a pile in position, an operation which sometimes occupied as much as 20 minutes.

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Bluebook (online)
64 So. 903, 134 La. 1045, 1914 La. LEXIS 1700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-orleans-gravel-sand-co-la-1914.