Carter v. Cape Fear Lumber Co.

39 S.E. 828, 129 N.C. 203, 1901 N.C. LEXIS 50
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 5, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 39 S.E. 828 (Carter v. Cape Fear Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Cape Fear Lumber Co., 39 S.E. 828, 129 N.C. 203, 1901 N.C. LEXIS 50 (N.C. 1901).

Opinion

MONTGOMERY, J.

The plaintiff was injured while employed by the defendant, in the receiving of lumber from a slide and placing the lumber upon a truck for transfer to a car and thence to a dry-kiln. The slide was at an angle of about 38 degrees and about six feet in width. There was a platform at the base of the slide about fifteen inches wide, according to the testimony of the plaintiff. At each outer edge of the platform there was a “bumper” (a square piece of timber) protruding above the'platform for the purpose of stopping and holding in position the pieces of plank, raised singly to the top of the slide by automatic machinery, as they descended on the slide to the platform. These bumpers were fastened and held by iron clamps or bands, bolted to the beams. Alongside of the platform and touching it, according to the testimony of the plaintiff, a truck was placed to receive the planks, and which, when loaded, was moved laterally on an inclined track to another track, and from that other track placed on a car and carried thence to the dry-ldln. On the other side of the truck, in its first position, were placed two upright standards to hold in place the loaded truck and keep it from rolling off. These standards rested on a platform on a level with the truck, and in front of them was an inch scantling nailed to the platform, which acted as a check or mortise to hold the standards at the bottom. The tops of the standards were placed in a mortice in a board nailed to the top of the frame. To prevent the loaded truck from *205 moving when the standards were removed, “chocks” (wooden blocks) of the right shape and dimensions were furnished by the defendant to be placed underneath the wheels, and they were used at the time of the plaintiff’s injury. These “chocks” were removed by hand, an employee standing or stooping at. each end of the truck for that purpose after the standards have been removed, in order that the loaded truck may roll to the transfer track.

The plaintiff, in his complaint, alleges negligence on the part of the defendant, first, in that the “defendant recklessly, negligently and wantonly permitted lumber to be thrown down the slide against a bumper, which was insecurely and negligently and defectively erected, and by the force and weight of the lumber, in its fall striking against the said defective bumper, caused a car, placed in its regular and customary position — which, on account of the defective condition and construction of the bumper, rested against the bumper— to turn over and throw the load of lumber and car on the body of the plaintiff, crushing him beneath ibs weight and breaking both legs of the plaintiff, the left leg in two places and the right leg near the thigh, inflicting serious, permanent and bodily injury to the plaintiff, and causing Mm great suffering and pain, prostrating and confining him to a hospital for a period of nearly six months, and seriously affecting his nervous system.” And second, “That the’ defendant company was further negligent in not providing proper and sufficient appliances to prevent the said car from moving and turning over when struck, as hereinbefore alleged, whereby the plaintiff suffered the injury complained of.”

The alleged negligence in the construction of the frame or stall may be eliminated from the case, for although the plaintiff said that the frame was insecure, yet he also said that if he had not pulled the standard out of the bottom it would not have broken. The injury, then, did not result from *206 want of strength or security in the frame or stall. It is true that the plaintiff testified that at other places there was in use a method of fixing standards securely, but, as we have said, the insecurity of the standard was not the cause of the injury to the plaintiff. The standards had been removed by the plaintiff, and, as he says, if they had not been pulled up at the bottom, they would not have been broken. And also, the plaintiff further said that at the Angola Lumber Company's mill at Wilmington, there was a latch that held the car until the laborers could get away to a secure place. But that testimony was in reference to the use of a latch to hold the truck instead of holding it by the method of “chocks,” and not the security or insecurity of 'the method of holding the cai’ by standards and frame. There was no evidence on the part of the plaintiff that the plan of holding the trucks by “chocks” was not safe and secure.

The real matter for consideration, then, is the alleged negligence of the defendant in reference to the construction of the bumpers at the time of the plaintiff’s injury and about that matter was made the main argument of the plaintiff’s counsel in this Court- The plaintiff testified that “the lumber that came down the slide came in the usual way, and in the same way as it had been coming ever since I had been working there. The platforms were in good condition. The frame-work was substantial. The trucks upon which the lumber is loaded is made of iron. They did not break. The iron tracks did not give way, there was nothing the matter with the slides or stalls, except the bumper was loose. It is an iron collar or band around the top of the bumper that is fastened to the beams on the slide or platform. The iron collar did not break or wrench out. The bumper had a loose play within the collar.” A safe place in which to work had been furnished to plaintiff, and every appliance that was necessary to conduct the operations of the mill was furnished, *207 and all in good condition except that under tbe iron collar of •one of tbe bumpers there was a play of half an inch, caused by tbe wearing of tbe timber, and not by decay or rot. The plaintiff did not know at tbe time of bis injury of tbe loose collar around tbe bumper, but be saw it several months thereafter when be was at tbe mill, and it bad not been changed, but a witness for tbe plaintiff said that tbe collar bad a play of half an inch on tbe day of tbe injury. Tbe plaintiff gave the following description of tbe manner in which be was hurt: “We have to lift the standard above tbe chocks below about one and one-fourth inch out of tbe groove, and then pulling tbe bottom ends out, lower them until tbe top end slips out of tbe mortice above. We have to take out tbe standards before moving tbe loaded trucks of lumber out of tbe frame. I bad taken out one standard. I was raising tbe last standard. Just as I did so, and while in a stooping position lifting it up, a plank of lumber 16 feet long and one inch thick came down tbe slide by automatic machinery and struck the bumper on tbe sidé of tbe truck opposite to me. The plank struck the bumper and jarred tbe car, and tbe car and the lumber came right over on nm Tbe standard which I was raising broke out of the mortice above, in which it was fastened. I could not stop the car. Tbe bumper was loose. It had a play of one-half inch or more. The loaded trucks were tight in between the standards and the bumper.” At tbe conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, the defendant made a motion to dismiss as of nonsuit, and, upon the "same having been overruled, introduced evidence. Upon the close of the evidence on both sides, the defendant renewed its motion to dismiss the action — a proceeding which amounts to a demurrer to the evidence under tbe old system of pleading. Means v. R. Co., 126 N. C., 424.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 S.E. 828, 129 N.C. 203, 1901 N.C. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-cape-fear-lumber-co-nc-1901.