Dever v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp.

266 So. 2d 455, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6029
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 19, 1972
DocketNo. 4987
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 266 So. 2d 455 (Dever v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dever v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp., 266 So. 2d 455, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6029 (La. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

BOUTALL, Judge.

This is a claim for personal injuries by an employee arising from an accident which occurred while on the job, and it is brought in tort against six (6) defendants who are officers and supervisory employees of plaintiff’s employer, together with their insurer. A trial by jury was had and the jury returned a verdict for plaintiff and against three (3) of the officials and their insurer in the amount of $75,000.00, subject to a credit for workmen’s compensation and medical benefits paid. A verdict was rendered in favor of three (3) of the defendants dismissing plaintiff’s claim against them. This appeal is by those officials and the insurer cast in judgment.

The testimony in the case is fairly well uncontradicted, and the basic issue is the application of the pertinent law relative to the liability of corporate officials and supervisory personnel.

The facts are that the plaintiff was engaged in loading steel from the employer’s yard into a truck, along with two (2) other men. The operation was as follows. The steel to be loaded was channel beams of some 40 feet in length, and they lay in a stack, secured in bundles, in the yard. A mobile crane, installed upon a heavy truck frame, was pulled into position next to the stack of channel beams, and the flat bed truck to be loaded was pulled alongside the crane away from the pile of beams, and facing in the same direction as the truck portion of the crane. This enabled the crane operator to swing to his left, pick up some beams, which were hooked on by plaintiff, and then swing the load 180 degrees to his right and deposit the beams on the flat bed of the truck. Plaintiff helped to guide the beams as the crane traversed its arc of motion and to straighten the beams out so that they could be properly laid on the truck bed, whereupon the truck driver would unhook the beams and the process would be repeated.

Although plaintiff’s testimony is to the effect that the truck had not been completely loaded, the testimony of everyone else is to the effect that the loading opera[457]*457tion had been completed, and the crane was in the process of being secured for the night. As the crane operator attempted to lower the crane boom into position for the night, it descended out of control and smashed the plaintiff, who was standing beneath the boom, to the ground, causing him severe injuries.

The main witness as to how the accident occurred is the crane operator, Clarance Cooksey. Plaintiff, due to the severe injuries he sustained, did not remember the facts of the accident. The last fact he remembered was standing at the rear of the flat bed of the truck and he remembered nothing more until he regained consciousness in the hospital. The truck driver, Charles Fury, testified that after the last beams were unloaded on the truck, he climbed over to the front of the truck and was attempting to get into the cab to move the truck away, and so he did not see what took place either. He testified that the last time that he saw plaintiff was when plaintiff was standing at the rear of the flat bed of the truck. Cooksey, himself, while he explained in detail his activities and what took place in connection with the crane, had his attention fastened on the end of the crane boom, as was his practice, and could not explain how plaintiff got from the rear of the truck to the place where the boom was being lowered. Accordingly, there is no explanation for plaintiff being beneath the boom when it was attempted to be lowered.

Cooksey’s testimony is that after they had loaded the last beam, he noted that plaintiff was leaning against the rear end of the trailer. He then pulled the block of the crane up near the end of the boom, preparing to secure the crane for the night. After he did this, he swung the boom 90 degrees counterclockwise, so that it was facing directly aft, or away from the truck or the cab portion of the crane unit. He then proceeded to lower the boom, intending to secure it about 10 to 15 feet from the ground, as was his customary practice. He gave no signal that he was lowering the boom. While swinging and lowering the boom, Cooksey kept his attention on the tip of the boom. As the boom swung down, it proceeded to come down too fast and Cooksey was unable to stop the descent of the boom, even though he applied the foot brakes. As the boom was coming down, for the first time he noted that Dever was directly under the boom, and perceiving that the boom would apparently strike Dever, Cooksey yelled to Dever to “watch it” or words to that effect. His yells were heard by Fury. Dever ducked over in an apparent attempt to avoid the boom, but the boom struck Dever a glancing blow on the head and knocked him down. The boom continued down and struck the ground with sufficient force to fracture the boom.

Cooksey testified that as the boom commenced its faster than normal rate of descent, he noticed that the gears and chains were still turning, indicating that the clutch to the boom was still in gear. The effect of the clutch still being engaged is similar to that of the clutch in an automobile descending an incline, wherein the clutch exercises a slowing or braking effect upon the vehicle. Similarly, the engagement of the clutch while the boom was being lowered would have the effect of slowing the descent of the boom inasmuch as it was pulling against the gears and cable.

Cooksey was unable to explain the rapidity of the boom descent, and testified that he did everything in accordance with normal procedure, and such an event had never occurred before. He noted that upon leaving the cab of the crane after the accident, that the air pressure gauge showed only 20 pounds, which was considerably below the normal operating pressure of 80 pounds per square inch. The clutch system is operated by air pressure; however, the brakes were manually operated. The evidence of both Cooksey, and Joseph W. Brown, the Superintendent of Shops, under whom Cooksey worked, was that after the accident, when Cooksey started up the [458]*458crane to find out what went wrong, the air pressure built right back up to 80 pounds per square inch. They found nothing wrong with the crane, except, of course, for the fractured boom, and were unable to ascertain what went wrong.

It is the contention of plaintiff that the crane failed because of the malfunction or hanging open of an air pressure release valve, called an exhaust port, in the pneumatic clutch system. Plaintiff produced an expert witness, L. L. Denson, a mechanical engineer, who testified that, under the circumstances as set out above, the failure of this particular valve would cause the air pressure to be lowered, such that the clutch would not be engaged, or only slightly engaged, and thus the boom would be falling practically free. Such a malfunction is commonly caused by the entrance of dirt, rust or other foreign objects into the air supply, and that such foreign matter could cause the valve to stick open on occasions. He stated that a regular and proper maintenance system could prevent such occurrences.

It is plaintiff’s theory of the case that the statutory law requires safe working conditions and the exercise of extreme caution in the operation of cranes, and that the failure to set up a regular, periodic maintenance system for this particular crane, together with the failure to instruct employees in the proper use of signals for its operation, constitute violations of the law.

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266 So. 2d 455, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dever-v-employers-liability-assurance-corp-lactapp-1972.