Cravens v. Poston

71 S.W.2d 1044, 254 Ky. 542, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 113
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 25, 1934
StatusPublished

This text of 71 S.W.2d 1044 (Cravens v. Poston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cravens v. Poston, 71 S.W.2d 1044, 254 Ky. 542, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 113 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

Noel P. Cravens brought this action in the Clark circuit court against Minta Poston to recover damages for personal injuries received by the appellant while employed by the appellee and engaged in unloading from a truck a heavy safe.

At the conclusion of plaintiff’s testimony, the trial court sustained the motion for a directed verdict in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff by his petition alleged that at the time of receiving his injury the defendant, Minta Poston, was *543 operating a general- storage and hauling business at Winchester, Ky., in the operation of which she regularly employed three motortrucks and three and more than three employees. Further he pleaded that on or about November 18, 1931, while working for the defendant, he was, together with three other employees then in her service, engaged in moving and delivering, a heavy iron safe, weighing some 5,000 pounds, from one building to another in Winchester, and that while engaged in unloading the same from the truck over a tramway, he-was injured by reason of the defendant’s negligence in failing to furnish a sufficient number of men to safely unload it.

The evidence is to the effect that upon this occasion,, while the crew was doing the work of removing the safe-, from the bank onto the truck, the defendant was present, directing and using six men, including the plaintiff, in its removal; that she then dismissed two of the six men,, with the direction that the appellant and the three others haul and deliver the safe to the other building, without, further accompanying them or directing them as to how they were to unload the safe.

The plaintiff and his witnesses testified that the> four of them to whom was left and intrusted the work of unloading and delivering the safe discussed how it should be done, when it was agreed by them that they would place skids, eighteen feet long, from the end of the truck leading to the ground, with props placed underneath the truck end and also the tramway' thus made, when two of them would, with crowbars, slowly prize the safe from off the truck onto the tramway, while the other two, including the plaintiff, would, with their crowbars placed under the front wheels of the safe, hold back its advancing while being slowly pushed forward by the two men at the rear. It is further in evidence that the defendant had directed that a block and tackle be put in the truck for use in unloading the safe, but plaintiff testified that he and his three fellow employees decided that the stated crowbar method of unloading the safe was better, both for the reason he did not use the block and tackle for handling heavy loads, such as was the safe, and also because he did not have enough men present for its proper use.

Witnesses testified that the eighteen-foot tramway provided was some 36 inches wide and that as the safe *544 was being lowered over it, Davis, one of tbe helpers who was stationed in front of the safe on the tramway with plaintiff to hold back and check the safe’s advance, let his crowbar slip from under one of its front wheels, with the result that the safe, thus released on the incline, pressed with such weight and force against plaintiff’s crowbar as to force the same violently backward, striking him in the chest and seriously injuring him.

The plaintiff by his petition alleged that the defendant regularly engaged, in running her hauling and storage business, more than three employees and, basing his action upon the theory that his employer, in so regularly operating her business, came within the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Ky. Stats, sec. 4880 et seq.), to such effect he and his witnesses testified that while he and one Stanley Bailey were the only two men regularly employed and on her pay roll, John Davis and Cal Murray were, as frequent helpers, kept on what might be called a waiting list, and usually called by the office every morning to see if they were needed for that day’s special work or, fipon failing to come, if needed they or others were sent for; that they were thus frequently employed through being used, if present or available, whenever the nature of the day’s hauling jobs called for extra help. It was admitted, however, that the latter two colored employees were not carried on the defendant’s pay roll and were at times engaged in other steady employment, when they would not be called or engaged by the defendant upon the frequent occasions when extra help was required and employed.

It is further shown by the evidence that the plaintiff had for a period of some three years or longer been regularly employed by the defendant and put in charge of one of her two motortrucks used in her hauling business and that he had been given and exercised the right, ,as such mover and driver, to call in extra help to assist in his hauling work when found needed, even without ¡securing defendant’s special permission therefor; that this discretionary right of hiring helpers was exercised by plaintiff, in common with Stanley Bailey, defendant’s other regular employee, who had charge of the other truck.

The defendant by her. answer denied the allegations of the petition that she regularly engaged in her hauling business three employees or more than three employees, *545 or that she regularly operated as many as three motor-trucks, or that on account of her alleged negligence in failing to furnish a sufficient number of competent workmen to do the work mentioned in the petition the plaintiff received his injury as allegéd, or that it was caused through her alleged negligence in failing to furnish the same number of men to unload the safe as had been used to load the same, or that but for such alleged gross negligence plaintiff’s injuries would not have occurred.

After traversing all the allegations of the petition, she further pleaded that plaintiff, on the occasion mentioned, was guilty of such contributory negligence that, but for which, he would not have been injured. Further she averred that she was not present when plaintiff claims to have been injured while attempting to unload the safe and that plaintiff was at such time himself the foreman in charge of the work of unloading it; that he himself, acting as foreman of the crew, gave the directions as to how the safe should be unloaded and knew the danger of unloading it in the way it was unloaded; further, that he so acted against the advice of some of the men then engaged with him and thereby assumed the risk of unloading the safe in such manner; and that the responsibility for his injury, caused by his own act, rested upon him.

The plaintiff, as stated, based his action on the theory that as the defendant was affected by the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Law, but had failed to operate thereunder, she was deprived of the right to defend the action on the grounds of contributory negligence or assumed risk, yet also alleged that defendant was guilty of gross negligence in failing to furnish appellant a sufficient number of men with which to safely do the work of unloading the safe she directed him to do or adequate means or instruments for safely doing it.

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.W.2d 1044, 254 Ky. 542, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cravens-v-poston-kyctapphigh-1934.