Chickasha Cotton Oil Co. v. Roden

66 F.2d 127, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2565
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJune 29, 1933
DocketNo. 683
StatusPublished

This text of 66 F.2d 127 (Chickasha Cotton Oil Co. v. Roden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chickasha Cotton Oil Co. v. Roden, 66 F.2d 127, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2565 (10th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

JOHNSON, District Judge.

A_ppollee recovered judgment in the court below for $5,000 as damages on account of the death of Horace Roden, her son, caused as alleged in her complaint by the negligence of appellant. At the conclusion of the evidence appellant moved for a directed verdict in its favor. The motion was denied and exception taken. Later appellant excepted to instructions given the jury by the court and to the refusal of the court to give instructions requested by it. The ease is in this court to review these matters.

It appears from the evidence that on the 18th day of November, 1929; Horace Roden was employed by appellant to operate a cotton press in an oil mill owned by it. While so engaged, he was caught in the cotton press and killed. The press consisted of what may be described as an oblong box, open at the bottom, about 9' feet high, 54 inches wide, and 27 inches in depth. The box was divided into two compartments, the plane of division being the floor level of the pressroom; the upper compartment was the press box; the lower compartment was the hopper. One sido of the hopper could be opened back about 2 feet at the top. Inside the hopper was what is called a follow block. The follow block could be driven upward a.nd into the press block by hydraulic pressure from a force pump located in an adjacent room. At the side of the press box in the pressroom there was a lever attached to a by-pass valve. By turning this lever in one direction the valve was closed and the pressure of the water from the pump was transmitted through the ram to the follow block; by turning the lever in the opposite direction the valve was opened, the water diverted from the ram and the pressure against the follow block released; by adjusting the lever so that the valve was partly closed and partly open the speed of the follow block, whether up or down, could be controlled. Theoretically the lever might be placed in a position so as to hold the follow block stationary, but in practice such result was not often attained. In [128]*128addition to the above manipulations, the follow block could be held stationary at any point in the press by closing the valve and shutting off the pump — the latter was accomplished by shifting the drive belt to the idler.

The duty of the pressman operating this machinery was to compress loose rolls of cotton delivered from the gin into bales such as are seen in commerce. To do this he put rolls of cotton in the hopper, then closed the opening and applied the hydraulic pressure to the follow block; the follow block, moving upward, forced the loose cotton into the press box. This process was repeated usually three times in making a bale. Before or after the last of these operations the pressman spread on the follow bloek and over its edges the bagging required for covering the lower side of the finished bale. It was while engaged in spreading bagging on the follow block that young Roden was killed. At the time of his death he was about twenty years old. He lived with his mother, and contributed to her support by his labor. He was killed in the afternoon of the first day of his employment as pressman. For about two weeks prior to the day he was killed he had been employed in the mill at other work. During these two weeks he had assisted to some extent the pressman then in charge in the operation of the cotton press. It does not appear that he had ever spread bagging on the follow bloek prior to the day he himself became pressman. In the afternoon of the first day of his employment in this work, a few minutes before the end of the day shift, he was observed by Mr. Bass, the foreman, in the hopper and spreading bagging on the follow bloek. Not appearing at the end of the shift, search was made for Roden, and at the suggestion of Mr. Bass, the foreman, the cotton press at which he had been working was examined; the follow bloek was found to be up and in the press box; when lowered, Roden’s body was on it; he was dead.

At the trial it developed that • pressmen who had preceded Roden in this work made use of different methods of follow block control while engaged in spreading bagging on the follow bloek.

J. R. Popehoke, who had previously operated the press, testified that he “shut off the pump and closed the valve and then got in the press and spread the bagging; that by closing the valve and stopping the pump the follow bloek stood still; that under such circumstances the follow bloek would neither go up nor go down, unless the crimp was leaking, and in such ease the follow block would go down very slowly, so slowly that it wouldn’t be noticed.”

A. J. Patrick, another pressman, testified that:

“Mr. Bass the day foreman instructed him how to operate the press; * * * that Mr. Bass showed him how to stop the pump; * * * it was accomplished by merely pulling a lever which shifted a belt from the pulley onto the idler; * * * Mr. Bass showed him that if the block was up and the valve was closed and the pump was stopped that the follow block would stand stationary at the place where it was at the time the pump was stopped.
“He was instructed to open the valve and let the follow bloek down and then while the follow .block was at the bottom and the valve open to get in the press and spread the bagging.”

He further testified: “That he didn’t operate the press at all times in the manner in which Mr. Bass instructed him to operate; that on some occasions he operated the press by breaking the lever open, thus throwing the valve open part way; that in breaking the lever * * * he usually tried to stop the follow bloek about two feet or two feet and a half below the level of the floor; that he tried to so stop the follow bloek instead of letting it go onto the bottom as Mr. Bass instructed him to do because sometimes one end of the bloek would be next to the doors, and at other times he would just be in a hurry.”

Dexter Driggers, a former pressman, testified that: “He was instructed as to the manner of operating the press by Jewell Ding the linterman at the mill, who instructed him to operate the press with the valve rather than by cutting off the pump.”

In explaining his method of operation he said: “Well, after I got the cotton in, I adjusted it by the lever in the wall on the valve. I adjusted my valve as near right as I could. I took it going down when I put the bagging on.”

It seems reasonably certain that young Roden at the time he was killed was using the method of follow bloek control employed by the witness Driggers and at times by the witness Patrick.

Bass, the foreman, testified: “That shortly before Roden was injured, Roden threw his car keys to another boy who wanted to put his ear in the garage wherein Roden’s car was left; that the boy to whom Roden had thrown his keys later threw them back to him, the wit[129]*129ness, to be delivered to Roden. That he went in the press room and found Roden down in the press putting the bagging on and handed Roden’s keys to him; that he hardly stopped in delivering Roden’s keys and did not notice what position the lever was in or whether the pump was on or off, yet he did happen to notice that, at the time, Roden had the block up about two feet from the bottom of the press and was down on one knee and standing on one foot putting one end of the bagging on the block. That later on, Patrick came in and asked the whereabouts of Roden and thereafter the two began to search for him; that while looking around the mill he told Patrick to look in the press; that Patrick found Roden there.”

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Bluebook (online)
66 F.2d 127, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chickasha-cotton-oil-co-v-roden-ca10-1933.