Carnes v. Guelph Patent Cask Co.

104 N.W. 322, 141 Mich. 23, 1905 Mich. LEXIS 737
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 21, 1905
DocketDocket No. 101
StatusPublished

This text of 104 N.W. 322 (Carnes v. Guelph Patent Cask Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carnes v. Guelph Patent Cask Co., 104 N.W. 322, 141 Mich. 23, 1905 Mich. LEXIS 737 (Mich. 1905).

Opinion

Moore, C. J.

This is a negligence case, brought under the survival act by the plaintiff, as the administratrix of her late husband’s estate. The defendant was engaged in running a saw and veneering mill at Wolverine, Mich., and banked its logs for summer use on its grounds near the mill in some 20 rollways, piled about 10 rods long and 14 to 16 feet high. In placing the logs in these rollways, the whole front of the banking ground was carried along at once, or nearly so, in order to give numerous teams a chance to unload as they came from the woods, thus avoiding one waiting for the other. The logs fell from the sleighs upon skids about 30 or 40 feet long lying upon the ground. Beyond these skids were short ones, also upon the ground, for the purpose of enabling the chainman to pass the decking chain under the logs to be put up on top of the rollways.

The work of rolling the logs on the long skids to near the rollways was called “ tailing down.” When the logs reached the short skids they were left by the tailers, and the chainmen put them in place to be chained and sent up. They were elevated to the top of the rollways by means of other skids standing in an inclined position, with one end on the ground and the other on top of the rollway, the logs being rolled up these inclined skids by means of a block and chain and horse power. The chain at the log end had a crotch, one side of which was passed under each end of the log, the ends of the crotched chain being on top [25]*25of the rollway. The log would lie in a loop, so that when the team was put in motion it would be rolled up the skids to the desired point on the rollway. On the day when decedent was killed, one of the top men did not appear,- and one of the chainmen took his place, and decedent took the chainman’s place.

About 11 o’clock in the forenoon it became necessary, to move the inclined skids from the face of the rollway for the purpose of putting more logs at the bottom and in front of the face to strengthen it, there having been evidence of its being weak for some moments before. These inclined skids were green poles some 16 feet long and 6 inches through, with an iron at the top end where they rested on the top log of the roll way in the shape of a “ T, ” the upright bar of the “T” being lengthwise and the top bar crosswise of the skid, with each end of the crosspiece turned down into a sharp spike. These spikes were driven into the logs where the skids rested by the weight of the other logs as they passed over the skids on their way to the top of the rollway, and were for the purpose of holding the skids in place so they would not move sidewise, or “scoot up with the logs.” There were two ways of removing the skids from the face of the, rollways — one, just to step up with the man’s back to the roll way, take the skid on the shoulder and walk away with it; if it was considered dangerous to move the skid, to take a canthook and loosen the ground end so as to test the strength of the face before shouldering it. Almond Jones was chaining at one end of the logs on the forenoon in question, and when the time came to move the inclined skids stepped up to the one on his end of the rollway and took it on his shoulder. At this moment decedent went to the other skid, and was seen by one of the top men to pass under it, and the next instant the rollway went out. One of the top men ran up the deck and escaped, the other went down with the front, but was not hurt. Decedent was caught between the logs of the rollway and those that were lying on the ground in front of it, and so crushed that he died in about two hours.

[26]*26At the close of the evidence on the part of the plaintiff, the defendant moved for a directed verdict, and the motion was granted, the court holding that no negligence was shown against defendant; that, if any was shown, it was that of a co-servant; that the risk was obvious; that decedent was guilty of contributory negligence. The case is brought here by writ of error.

It is the claim of plaintiff that her husband was by trade a metal polisher; that until the day of his death he had never worked on or about the roll way; that he was not likely to see the iron in the upper part of the skid, so that the danger was latent; that he did not appreciate the danger of removing the skid; that he was set at this dangerous work without being informed of its dangerous character ; and that the questions involved should have been left to the jury by the judge, instead of directing a verdict. No witnesses were sworn on the part of the defendant. There is no direct proof as to what instructions were given to deceased when he was set at this work. It is true some of plaintiff’s witnesses say they did not hear any instructions given to him, but there was abundant opportunity to give him instructions without the witnesses who were sworn hearing it. We do not need, however, to decide what the presumption would be under such a state of facts. The record shows the deceased was 24 years old. There is nothing to show he was, not a man of at least ordinary intelligence. He had worked in the woods that winter for the defendant about 45 days. His work was clearing away for the teams and placing skidways. He then went to work in the yard where this and other railways were in process of building. He then constituted a part of a crew whose work resulted in getting the logs from the sleighs that brought them to the yard into the railways where they remained until they were to be manufactured later. Some of these men unloaded the logs. Mr. Carnes helped to tail them down from where they were unloaded to the men who passed them up the skids into the railways. His [27]*27work took him near the front of the rollways, where the skids were in constant use, and the logs which he assisted in taking down were put into the rollways. It did not require more than a superficial knowledge of the work to know that if there was not something at the top of the longer skids to hold them in place the impact of the log striking the skids at the lower end would carry them forward to the front of the rollway, do away with the incline, and project the upper end of the skids above the top of the rollway; or, as stated by one of the witnesses, the skids would “scoot up with the logs.” Mr. Carnes had been at work helping send the logs up the rollway from where they were left by the tailmen all the forenoon until nearly 11 o’clock, when the accident occurred. His father-in-law was a witness for plaintiff. On the cross-examination he testified:

Q. Now, Mr. Carnes had been tailing down, you say. How far down was he assisted in tailing down the logs— how close to the rollway as it was being constructed ?
‘A. The men that tailed down usually brought them clear down to the skidways, provided there was no log there. They just merely kept the back moved up so that the chainmen could get them without traveling so far after them. * * *
“Q. So that during the two weeks, or such a matter, that Mr. Carnes was there assisting in unloading and in tailing down logs, he was in the immediate vicinity of where they were putting up the rollways, was he not ?
“A. Yes, sir; principally so. At times a few rods away, and at other times within a few feet. All of that time when he was working he was where he could see what was being done, and the manner of building the rollways — what they did, and what the different men did. * * * The usual crew was six men. There were two topmen and two chainmen, and two men unloading and tailing down.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 N.W. 322, 141 Mich. 23, 1905 Mich. LEXIS 737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carnes-v-guelph-patent-cask-co-mich-1905.