Crawford v. Fayetteville Lumber & Cement Co.

212 F. 107, 128 C.C.A. 623, 212 F. 109, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 2065
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 16, 1914
DocketNo. 4022
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 212 F. 107 (Crawford v. Fayetteville Lumber & Cement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford v. Fayetteville Lumber & Cement Co., 212 F. 107, 128 C.C.A. 623, 212 F. 109, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 2065 (8th Cir. 1914).

Opinion

POPE, District Judge.

This is a suit for personal injuries brought by the plaintiff in error, Crawford, against the defendant company, for injuries sustained in the latter’s. lumber yard at Sapulpa, Old. The company’s principal place of business was at Fayetteville, Ark., and plaintiff was its local manager and chief representative at Sapul-pa when the injury occurred. At the time of the injury the defendant’s lumber yard at Sapulpa, including not only the lumber but the buildings, was being moved to another location a few blocks distant. The moving of the building and sheds was under'a contract with one Ed Roney, and the moving of the lumber and other stock on hand was given by contract to one Proctor. The old yards from which the buildings were being moved consisted of buildings surrounding what was practically a court. The office building was at the northwest corner of the yard, and had two stories, with two rooms upon the ground floor and one or more rooms on the second floor. The front or west room on the ground floor was used as an office, having two out doors, [108]*108one opening west on Park street and the other south into the court. The east room on the ground floor of the office building was used for the storage of glass, paint, and other material. The room (or rooms) on the second floor was also used for storage, containing sashes, doors, columns, window frames, and similar material, and being also occupied as a bedroom for an employé of the defendant named Towder-millc. Just outside of the door opening from the first story of the office building south into the court there was a platform from which went an open stairway to the landing at the entrance of the second story of the office building. This landing or platform extended eastward, not only to the east end of the office building, but beyond that into and through the length of a lumber shed which adjoined the office building on the east, and this platform, thus common to both buildings, constituted the upper walking space from which materials were handled in and out of the upper deck of the lumber shed, and was also the means by which access was had to the room on the second floor of the office building. This landing or platform was composed of 2x6 boards lying lengthwise, five abreast, about an inch apart.. It was supported by arms projecting underneath at intervals from the lumber sheds, except that the portion which was adjacent to the office building and formed the landing at this place was supported by the ends resting on and being nailed to the top of the stairway proper. In the course of the work of moving fhe buildings from the old to the new yard it was deemed desirable to move the lumber sheds in advance of the office building, and to that end it became necessary to disconnect such sheds from the office building at the west, and by cutting these sheds into appropriate sections to facilitate their being moved and to preserve them in convenient size for reinstallation at the new site. It thus became requisite, in moving the lumber shed away from the office building, to cut the platform at the junction of the shed and building. The effect of this cutting without more was to leave so much platform as remained adjacent to the office building, a length of some 10 feet, with no support other than the stairway which held up the end of the platform furthest westward from the cutting; the other supports being, as we have seen, a part of the sheds, and being removed by the cutting of the platform. After the disconnection of the shed from the office building by cutting the platform in the manner just mentioned, the office building was placed on rollers and pushed a foot or two west from the shed, so as to clear the way for the exit of the latter. The office building remained on rollers after being so moved until after the injury here involved. The sawing of the two buildings apart was about the 15th day of October, 1911. The actual work of sawing was apparently done by employes of Roney who, as we have above seen, had the contract to move the several buildings from the old location, but the place where it was to be severed was indicated to the contractor by one C. R. Robertson, representing the defendant company, who had been sent from Fayetteville to assist in the removal. Robertson upon this particular occasion arranged for the support of the platform following the severance by the following course: I-Ie placed a 2x4 under the end of the platform where it had been [109]*109sawed apart and perpendicular to the building. The end of the 2x4 nearest the building was supported by another 2x4 nailed underneath to the building, and the end furthest from the building and corresponding to the outer edge of. the platform rested upon and was supported, by an upright piece, probably 2x4, which was nailed to the platform at the upper end and rested upon the ground underneath. Thereafter, the office building having, as above stated, been placed on rollers and pushed forward a short distance, the upright was thereby to some extent thrown out of plumb, in view of which Robertson personally nailed the lower end of the upright to the lower platform. Within a few days after this Robertson was recalled to Fayetteville by the company, and the plaintiff Crawford left in sole charge of the yard until after the injury. This latter occurred about 7 o’clock on the evening of October 26, 1911, and about eight days after Robertson left. On the occasion of the injuries plaintiff went up the stairway and onto the platform to close the door of the upper room. The platform gave way, throwing him to the ground.

The court below directed a verdict in favor of the defendant, and three assignments of error are here made. The first and principal one is that the court erred in directing a verdict for the defendant. The other assignments relate to an alleged erroneous exclusion of evidence, and to an alleged untenable ground given by the court below, to wit, the assumption of risk, in instructing a verdict for the defendant. If the court was right as to the first ground the other assignments, even if well taken, would not change the result. The evidence rejected, even if admitted, was not of this degree of materiality, and as to the other ground, even if the court’s reason was wrong, the case would still be for affirmance if its conclusion was right.

We proceed, therefore, to consider whether upon the whole case there was any basis for a verdict favorable to the plaintiff. Much of defendant’s argument both here and apparently in the trial court was upon the ground that, while the plaintiff’s case proceeds upon negligence of Robertson in failing properly to secure the part of the platform left next to the office building, there is no allegation in the petition that it was any duty of Robertson to look after this. It is said that his sole duty as alleged was to superintend the removal and that nothing is alleged as to any duty, in effecting such removal, to leave the premises safe. It is contended that any breach proved is thus of a duty not alleged against him, so that a recovery is being sought outside the pleadings. It is also said that the proofs, equally with the pleadings, fail to show any employment or duty covering the condition of the portion of the platform left behind. To the argument that his alleged principalship in this particular matter receives support in the fact that he actually attempted to make such part of the platform safe by placing the supports above mentioned, it is answered by the defendant that what he did was, according to plaintiff’s own testimony, upon the express request of plaintiff, and that the latter thereby recognized a joint responsibility with Robertson in the matter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 F. 107, 128 C.C.A. 623, 212 F. 109, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 2065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-fayetteville-lumber-cement-co-ca8-1914.