Clark v. Tulare Lake Dredging Co.

112 P. 564, 14 Cal. App. 414, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 86
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 1910
DocketCiv. No. 739.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 112 P. 564 (Clark v. Tulare Lake Dredging Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Tulare Lake Dredging Co., 112 P. 564, 14 Cal. App. 414, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 86 (Cal. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an action for damages for the death of a minor son of plaintiff, alleged to have been caused through the negligence of the defendant, a corporation.

The cause was tried by jury. The plaintiff, in her complaint, claimed! damages in the sum of $10,000. The jury, however, returned a verdict for the sum of $5,000, for which amount the court entered judgment in favor of plaintiff.

This appeal is from the judgment so entered and from the order denying defendant a new trial.

The general points made by appellant are that the evidence does not support the verdict; that the court erred, to the prejudice of defendant, in the admission and rejection of certain testimony, and that the court erred, to defendant’s damage, in giving and refusing to give certain instructions and by the modification of others which were requested by defendant.

*418 The specific contention with respect to the specification of the insufficiency of the evidence to uphold the verdict is that the proofs disclose that the proximate cause of the accident by which the deceased received the injuries culminating in his death was his own negligence, and upon this ground a motion for a nonsuit was, upon the close of the case for plaintiff, presented and urged by defendant, said motion having been denied by the court. A similar motion on the same ground was made and denied on the close of. the case by both sides.

The consideration of this point will, of course, necessitate a careful scrutiny of the testimony, particularly so in view of the fact that a coemployee of deceased was the only other person present—one John Burnett—when the accident occurred and was, therefore, the only living eye-witness who was or could be produced at the trial.

It appears that the deceased, Ray Clark, at the time of his death, was a minor of the age of sixteen years and six months, approximately. He had been for a few weeks prior to his death an employee of defendant on its dredger, which was being operated in Tulare Lake, in Kings county. On 'the first day of May, 1907, while thus engaged, according to the averments of the complaint and the undisputed evidence, his foot “was so caught and entangled in a large shaft (connected with said dredger) and the machinery running and operated thereby that his foot and leg were crushed, broken and mangled,” and from the effects of the injuries so received he died on the second day of May, 1907.

From the evidence it further appears that the deceased was one of three children of the plaintiff, from whom the father of said children had been- separated and had lived separate and apart for some eight years prior to the trial of this action, and had during that period contributed nothing toward the support of his family.

At the time of the employment of the deceased by the defendant, and for some time prior thereto, the plaintiff resided with her children and her aged mother near Merced, although the deceased, at the time he accepted, through his mother, employment with defendant, was and had been for some time attending school in the city of Fresno.

*419 The accident causing the death of the deceased happened at about the hour of 2 o’clock in the morning, the deceased and said Burnett, the coemployee to whom we have referred, being at that time on the night “shift.”

As stated, the deceased! was, through plaintiff, employed by the defendant in the month of April, 1907. As to the circumstances of said employment, the plaintiff testified: “Mr. Lewis [president of defendant] said that he wanted him for a lever-man. I asked him if he thought he could do it. He had already seen the boy, and he said yes, he thought he could do it nicely. That he seemed to be a fine-looking boy, and he was well pleased with him, and that he would teach him how to do it or have him taught. And that it was perfectly safe place up in the lever-room, and that he was going to put him to work in the lever-room. He asked me if the boy—or rather it came up in the conversation, if the boy knew anything about machinery. I told Mr. Lewis, no, he did not, and I wanted him to be put in there where there was no danger. Mr. Lewis said there was no danger. That he liked the appearance of the boy and would teach him. Ray asked me about going to work for Mr. Lewis; I told him yes. He wanted to go and earn some money to finish up his schooling and help me; I told Mr. Lewis that, and he told me that he would take good care of Ray, and that his wife would look out for him. I told him the boy hadn’t been away from home much.”

The witness, C. E. Través, gave the details of a conversation with defendant’s superintendent, had prior to the time at which negotiations for the employment of deceased were carried on with plaintiff, in which the proposed employment of the boy and the character of the duties which it was proposed that he should perform on the dredger were discussed. The witness testified: “I am fifty-two years old; my occupation or business is mechanical engineer and machinist. Have had about twenty-five years’ practical experience in mechanical engineering. I know Mr. Lewis, I know Mrs. Clark, and I" know the boy that was killed. Mr. Lewis came to my place of business at Fresno and wanted to get a man. I told him I didn’t know of any, but I knew a good boy. I asked him what he wanted him for, and he said he wanted him to handle levers, and I said to handle levers on what, *420 and he said on the dredger, down to our dredger. I said this boy has no .experience, but he is willing to learn and he is about the only support of his mother. And he said we don’t want experienced hands, because the captain would rather have the men and break them in, as he gets better men than we do with some man that is already broke in. So I brought the boy down, or sent the boy down, rather. I told Mr. Lewis that the little boy did not know anything about machinery; that he was inexperienced', but that he wanted to learn and was ambitious and wanted to learn. Mr. Lewis replied that he wanted a lever-man. Mr. Lewis said there was no danger whatever above in the lever-room and that it would require but very little skill. He said it was away from the machinery and above, the lever-room was.”

Burnett, the coemployee of and on duty with deceased when the accident happened, described the dredger as follows: “Its hull is probably fifty or sixty feet long, and about twenty or twenty-five feet wide. There is a bulkheading around it and an open space in the front part, and the engine is on the inside of that and the shaft just in front of the engine; forward and on the outside of the bulkheading is the turntable and boom; above the roof in the forepart is the lever-house and cables from the drums running through sheaves at the end of the boom and makefast to the clam-shell bucket; . . . there are three levers in that lever-room, but only two operated, and there is a lever that is operated by the boat; there is no other machinery in this lever-room; these levers operated the machinery that is down below; that is, it operates the friction where the drums are, operates the drum that rolls and reels up the cable to hoist the bucket and to swing the boom around. . . . The levers operate certain machinery that is inside the inclosure, and the machinery consists of drums and spools. ...

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Bluebook (online)
112 P. 564, 14 Cal. App. 414, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-tulare-lake-dredging-co-calctapp-1910.