Carlson v. Sioux Falls Water Co.

59 N.W. 217, 5 S.D. 402, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 76
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 59 N.W. 217 (Carlson v. Sioux Falls Water Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlson v. Sioux Falls Water Co., 59 N.W. 217, 5 S.D. 402, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 76 (S.D. 1894).

Opinion

Fuller, J.

Plaintiff was a laborer in the employ of defendant and was, with about 25 co-laborers, engaged, at the time he received the injury for which he brings this suit to recover $5,000 damages, in digging a trench six feet in depth, in which to place water pipes or mains for the extension of the defendant’s system of waterworks in the city of Sioux Falls. At the time of the accident plaintiff had been thus engaged for 13 or 14 days, and had been in the employ of the defendant upon a former occasion, and about one year prior to this time. There were, at the time of the accident, about 15 other men engaged in placing the pipe and in replacing the earth which had been excavated, and all were under the immediate supervision of defendant’s foreman, W. M. Cunningham, by whom plaintiff was employed, and by whom the work was being personally conducted. The street in which the men were digginghadbeen graded and filled in something over a year before the accident, the greatest depth of the fill being about five or six feet, and at the place where j;he plaintiff was at work, and. where he was injured. The [405]*405street was 80 feet wide, and was graded and filled in with yellow clay, the banks sloping to the property line on each side. Mr. Cunningham assigned to each man a place 10 feet in length which was to be excavated to a depth of six feet, and each man was directed to throw all dirt on the east side, and thus the west side of the ditch was left clear, so that the men would have a smooth surface on which to work in placing the lengths of pipe in the ditch, where they were connected and covered by replacing the earth which had been thrown out of the trench. The plaintiff had gone down with that portion of the ditch which he was digging to a depth of nearly six feet, and had reached and was throwing out the black earth, which was the original surface before the street had been filled in with the yellow ciay taken from a cut in the vicinity of the place where the plaintiff was at work, when the east wall of the ditch, together with the dirt which had been thrown upon the bank, caved in upon the plaintiff, and caused the injury of which he complains and for which the jury gave him a verdict for $5,000. The grade was comparatively uniform, and it appears that there were no obstructions to prevent any one from seeing the fill as far as it extended. It would seem that a person standing on the center of any portion of the fill could look down on either side, and observe the depth of the fill about as readily as he could observe the water from a bridge placed five or six feet above and extending across a flowing stream. There was no sand or gravel mixed with the yellow clay of which this fill was composed, and the bank of the cut from which the street was filled, though about 15 feet in height, remained intact, and stood perpendicular at the time of the trial. Letters and characters cut in these banks some time prior were noticeable, and remained in their original condition. There is no direct evidence that clay of this kind, which has been placed in a fill for more than a year, and subjected to the elements and the weight of objects almost constantly passing over it, would be more likely to cave and fall into a ditch which was being dug [406]*406through it than ordinary earth which had remained undisturbed for many years without being thus subjected, and a court would not take judicial notice that the hazard or liability to be injured was greater than is usually incident to the employment in which the plaintiff was engaged. Other men, having like opportunity to observe, and who were plaintiff’s co-laborers, and witnesses in his behalf, knew that the trench was being dug through a fill, and we are unable to understand how Cunningham could have known, under the circumstances, anything about the probability of danger that was not within the knowledge of the plaintiff, as indications that banks of this kind were about to give way and cave in would ordinarily appear to one in the trench before they would be noticeable to a person standing upon the surface and at the side of such trench.

Upon the trial the plaintiff testified as follows: ‘ ‘Q. Well, now, the last- dirt you threw up that day before it caved, what kind of dirt was it? A. Black soil in the bottom. Just got down to the black soil. Q. Then you were digging right through dirt which had been put there? There was a fill, wasn’t there? A. I suppose it was a fill. Q. Don’t you know that it was? A. I never knew anything about it.” That the clay composing the fill slipped upon the black earth near the bottom of the trench, and thereby crumbled and caved in upon the plaintiff, seems to be the accepted theory as disclosed by the record; but there was nothing to indicate that plaintiff had reason to believe that there was danger from that source before the injury occurred. Plaintiff, who dug the ditch, and had an opportunity to observe the effects of removing the earth, if any were noticeable as the work progressed, testified that he apprehended no danger; and, taking into consideration the fact that the ditch was but six feet deep when completed, and the further fact that there were no stones or gravel to weaken the walls, or increase the liability of injury in case the same should give way the fact that plaintiff was injured appears to be one of those unforseen casualities to be regretted by all, and for [407]*407which none are responsible. It has been repeatedly held that under such circumstances there can be no recovery. If neither party knew, or by the use of ordinary prudence and power of observation could have discovered the danger, the accident was unavoidable, and there is no liability. Money v. Coal Co., 55 Iowa 671; Railway Co. v. Britz, 72 Ill. 256; Olson v. McMullen; 34 Minn. 94, 24 N. W. 318; Walsh v. Railroad Co., 27 Minn. 367, 8 N. W. 145. Water Supply Co. v. White, 124 Ind. 376, 24 N. E. 747, was a case tried on a state of facts nearly identical with the present, and in reversing a judgment for plaintiff, the court says: “An employe injured by the caving in of a ditch which he is assisting to construct through a soil composed largely of sand and gravel cannot recover for such injury, since the liability of the trench to cave in, and the danger, are alike open to the observation of all parties.” In the case of Anderson v. Winston, 31 Fed. 528, it appears that a day and a night gang of men were employed in excavating a tunnel through a hill in the city of St. Paul. The plaintiff, while working with the night gang, under a foreman, was injured. There was a'judgment for defendant, and plaintiff appealed. From the opinion we quote the following: • ‘A crack was formed shortly after a blast in the afternoon of the day before the accident, and sometime during the morning there was a slide of earth, and plaintiff was injured. It is claimed that the foreman of the gang saw the crack, and did not inform the men of the fact that it was a dangerous place and plaintiff was ordered to go to work there. The evidence of all the parties, with the exception of one, who testified as to the character of the excavation, goes directly to the point that the foreman saw the crack, and that they all saw it. Anderson testifies that he did not see it, but it is obvious that, if there was any danger, it was as apparent to Anderson as to any one else.” The judgment for defendant was sustained. The case of Olson v. McMullen, supra, was one in which the plaintiff,who was alleged to be an ignorant person, and unable to under[408]*408stand the English language, was injured while wheeling earth in a wheel-barrow to uncover a stone quarry, under the direction of a foreman.

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Related

Grandpre v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.
190 N.W. 323 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1922)
Carlson v. Sioux Falls Water Co.
65 N.W. 419 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
59 N.W. 217, 5 S.D. 402, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlson-v-sioux-falls-water-co-sd-1894.