Daly v. Kiel

106 La. 170
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1901
DocketNo. 13,868
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 106 La. 170 (Daly v. Kiel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daly v. Kiel, 106 La. 170 (La. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Blanchard, J.

Defendant, under contract with a Railroad Company, worked a gravel pit. He was getting out gravel for the Company. The means employed to get it out was a steam shovel, which was operated by an engine.

This engine was placed upon a kind of car, which was run on wheels [171]*171on a track laid after the fashion of railway tracks, and which had its connection with the main railway line.

The gravel was dug or scooped out of the hillside by the steam-shovel, which was attached to what is called “a crane.” This crane was a movable lift which transferred the steam-shovel with its load of gravel to open cars stationed on the improvised track, where it was dumped, thus loading the cars, and then the crane conveyed the steam-shovel back to the gravel bank where the scooping process was gone through with again, and so on.

The track on which the engine and cars moved had to be extended gradually as the steam-shovel worked its way into the bank of gravel.

For this purpose the ground about the machine and in front of the engine had to be levelled, and this work of leveling and of track laying devolved on three laborers who were employed for the purpose.

The plaintiff was one of these laborers. He had never before worked - in the gravel pit, and was a stranger in the neighborhood.

The evening before the day of the accident he reached, for the first time, the locality in question. He went there in quest of work. He applied to the superintendent in charge, representing the defendant, who engaged him as laborer, telling him to report at the pit for duty the next morning.

He did so, was assigned to work, and within an hour after beginning work met with the injury for which damages are herein claimed.

The amount sued for was $10,000. The case was tried by jury, who returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $1500, and defendant appeals. Plaintiff, answering the appeal, prays an increase in the amount awarded him.

The allegation of the petition is that plaintiff was placed in a perilous and dangerous position; that defendant, or his foreman in charge, knew it to be such; that plaintiff was ignorant of the, danger; and that no warning was given him of the same.

It is explained that the danger of the situation grew out of the fact that the gravel was being quarried by means of steam power from a perpendicular bank some twenty feet high, and that this bank was liable to cave, bringing down great masses of gravel and earth.

The averment is that plaintiff was assigned to service under or in close proximity to this bank, that it caved without warning, that he was caught under it, and received severe injuries.

He represents he suffered greatly, is a cripple for life, and incapae[172]*172itated from earning his livelihood by labor, and is otherwise without means of support.

The defense is that plaintiff was aware of whatever danger there was incident to the service in which he accepted employment, was duly and sufficiently warned of the same, and that he was injured as the result of his own negligence and want of care.

Ruling■ — Whether or not plaintiff was given sufficient warning of the dangers of the situation in which he was placed, is the controlling question in the case.

That the danger was not readily apparent, that plaintiff did not, himself, know of it, and thus needed to be warned, is, we think, sufficiently shown.

His statement, as a witness, is that when Mr. Self, the foreman of defendant, engaged him the evening before the day of his injury, he directed him to a boarding house, where he would find lodging, etc.

And then in answer to a question of his counsel as to the warning, if any, given him, he says:—

“No sir, he never gave me any warning. When I left the boarding house he said go down with Mr. Black, and one side is the bank where it caves, and the other side is the car side, and there ain’t much danger.”

About seven in the morning, at the time the work commenced, it seems Self, himself, went to the pit. He was engineer in charge of the work. And with reference to his presence there plaintiff testifies:—

“Mr. Self came down and told me to go over on the other side (meaning of the car on which the engine was) and dig that block out, that there was a rope attached and I could pull the block. He told me to keep both eyes on him and one on the bank. ‘Watch him,’ he says, ‘and you will know all about it’ — that was all the warning I got.”

The “block” referred to was, as we understand it, a short, thick piece of timber through which a jack-screw penetrated.

There was one, perhaps two, on either side of the engine car and their purpose was to hold the machine steady.

The “Mr. Black” referred to was an employee at the pit. He had charge of the “crane.”

His testimony is that where plaintiff was assigned to work was a dangerous place, because of the fact that the perpendicular bank of gravel was liable to cave at any time, and did do so several times daily. To the eye, however, he states it did not particularly present the idea 'of danger; that it looked safe.

He corroborates plaintiff’s statement as to what Self said to the lat[173]*173ter. That is, that Self told him to go over to that side of the engine car next to the bank and work, and to keep one eye on 'the bank and two on him; that he “could tell more by watching me (him) than by watching the dipper on the steam-shovel.”

Asked in what manner was that said to Daly (the plaintiff) he replied :—

“Well, I don’t know; I would take it in rather a light way, as though there was not much meaning to it.”

And he further states he did not consider it “as any warning particularly.”

Mr. Self, defendant’s engineer, who employed the plaintiff, testifies that the morning the latter started to work, he was assigned to no particular place further than to level ofE the ground in front of the shovel. Asked if before plaintiff started to work, he (Self) had given him any warning as to the danger, he replied:— . .

“Efe and two other men were standing in front of. the shovel and I looked at him and said your main work is to keep two eyes on the bank and the other on me.”

Considering that the plaintiff was a new hand just employed, that he knew little of the character of the work and nothing of the dangers attendant on the same, that he was a stranger to the locality, and had never seen the gravel pit until the evening before, that he had not been around it or on the hill from which the gravel was being dug, that he had not seen a caving of the bank and had not been apprised of the danger to be apprehended from that source, we are of the opinion that what was said to him by the engineer and foreman the morning he started to work was not sufficient to warn him of the danger.

The caving of the bank was apprehended and expected by defendant. The danger from that cause was foreseen by him. It was not by the plaintiff.

Had the latter been sufficiently warned, had the situation been intelligently explained to him, and yet he had been caught and injured by the falling bank, he could not recover.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Marshall v. Beno Truck Equipment, Inc.
481 So. 2d 1022 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1986)
Bearden v. Rucker
418 So. 2d 713 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1982)
Suhor v. Gusse
388 So. 2d 755 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1980)
Guy v. Tonglet
379 So. 2d 744 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1980)
Barnett v. Vanney
360 So. 2d 617 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1978)
Benoit v. International Harvester Company
251 So. 2d 389 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1971)
Weadock v. Eagle Indemnity Co.
15 So. 2d 132 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1943)
Hartman v. Aschaffenburg
12 So. 2d 282 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1943)
Danove v. Mahoney
176 So. 404 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1937)
Ory v. Bosio
159 So. 138 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1935)
Roy v. Mutual Rice Co. of Louisiana
143 So. 668 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1932)
Perez-Sandi v. Berges
125 So. 185 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1929)
Thiel v. Shiff
7 La. App. 582 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1928)
Interstate Electric Co. v. Neugas
3 La. App. 353 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1925)
Fitler v. Dennis Sheen Transfer Inc.
6 Pelt. 205 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1922)
Porter v. Rogers Oil & Gas Co.
72 So. 732 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1916)
Whitworth v. South Arkansas Lumber Co.
46 So. 912 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1908)
Stewart v. Texas & P. Ry. Co.
37 So. 129 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1904)
Carter v. Fred W. Dubach Lumber Co.
36 So. 952 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1904)
Gualden v. Kansas City Southern Railway Co.
106 La. 409 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 La. 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daly-v-kiel-la-1901.