Dunagan v. Bledsoe

1954 OK 32, 267 P.2d 586, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 445
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 27, 1954
Docket35869
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1954 OK 32 (Dunagan v. Bledsoe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunagan v. Bledsoe, 1954 OK 32, 267 P.2d 586, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 445 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

O’NEAL, Justice.

Leola Bledsoe, surviving widow o'f Raymond . Bleds.oe, recovered a judgment against the defendant, Mary B. Dunagan, for the alleged wrongful death of Raymond Bledsoe.

It was alleged that the defendant owned and operated a sand and gravel pit near the town of Hugo, Oklahoma; that on the 28th day of August, 1950, Raymond Bledsoe, an employee of George Towers, went upon said premises for a load of sand and gravel, at which tíme he was struck by a Chevrolet two-ton dump truck operated by one .Thomas C. Hawks, defendant’s employee, receiving injuries from which he died immediately.

In the conduct of said business defendant used heavy machinery for excavating, dredging, washing, lifting, moving, loading and transporting sand and gravel; that upon part of said premises defendant -máin-'tained -stockpiles where the washed conglomerate was dumped, drained and -dried, and later loaded by means of a power shovel .upon' trucks for transportation from the pit; these stockpiles were located in a draw or ravine to permit better drainage of the conglomerate and also to facilitate the unloading operations.

On the date of the accident Bledsoe was directed by his employer, George Towers, to go to defendant’s pit for a load of sand and gravel. Bledsoe backed his truck to the stockpile and while it was in a loading position a truck driven by Thomas C. Hawks, defendant’s employee, loaded with wet gravel from the washer, backed to the edge of one of the stockpiles and at said .point defendant’s truck ran over Bledsoe’s body resulting in his death. . ■

Plaintiff alleged general and specific acts of negligence in that defendant failed to furnish and maintain reasonably safe, wide, roomy and adequate driveway for trucks operating between the washer and the' stockpiles; that defendant failed to furnish a watchman' to warn customers of the approach of loaded trucks travelling between the washer and stockpiles; that defendant permitted the accumulation of loose gravel over the area which her stock trucks were required to back over and through in unloading operations; that defendant’s truck was in a defective condition in that it would slip out of reverse gear, which conditions resulted in the accident ánd death of Bled-soe.

Plaintiff’s action is in her own behalf and in behalf of her minor child for damages for .the alleged wrongful death-of-the deceased.

The defendant denied all material allegations of plaintiff’s petition, and further pleaded that plaintiff’s deceased was guilty of contributory negligence.

Plaintiff recovered a judgment in the trial court and from the order overruling •defendant’s motion for a new trial, she appeals.

For reversal, defendant contends that plaintiff’s evidence did not establish negligence or any causal'connection and, therefore, the trial cotirt erred in not sustaining defendant’s' démurrer to -'plaintiff’s, evidence, *588 and-also erred in not directing a verdict for defendant.

We find ' no substantial dispute with reference to the physical condition of defendant’s sand and gravel pit. At its plant, referred to as the washer, the gravel is elevated by a conveyer to the top of the ■plant, and by a process of shaking the gravel it is separated into various sizes, water is run through the gravel to cleanse it of dirt and ■ foreign substance. At the bottom of the plant the gravel is released from a chute into trucks for transportation to the stockpiles which are located approximately 150 yards from the washer. As the trucks advance to a point near the stockpiles they make a reverse turn and then back into the stockpiles where the wet load is released. When the plant is in operation trucks with wet gravel leave the plant every few minutes, unload as indicated and return to the plant for reloading. Defendant maintains a dragline at the stockpiles which, on the occasion of the accident, was operated by the defendant’s employee, Lockhart. The dragline is operated by a gasoline motor and when in use the exhaust makes so much noise that an approaching truck could not be heard by those near the stockpiles. A large pile of gravel was located on one side of the dragline and a pile of sand on the other side. In loading operations the dragline would lift a bucket of gravel, drop it into the truck, swing over for a bucket of sand and repeat the operation until the truck was fully loaded. Bled-soe signaled Lockhart by hand as he approached the stockpiles indicating he wanted a mixed load of gravel and sand. As he backed his truck into the stockpile Lockhart had picked up a bucket of gravel preparatory to dropping it into Bledsoe’s truck. The evidence discloses that there were two ruts or tracks running parallel toward the stockpiles which were used interchangeably by trucks in unloading operations, as well as by the general public in loading operations for transportation from the pit. These tr.aclcs or ruts were- approximately five..feet apart. .Trucks had little or no difficulty in backing, until they approached the. loose and. thick gravel. It was then necessary for the .driver of a truck to keep the wheels of his truck in the tracks or ruts; otherwise, the truck would stall. As Lock-hart emptied one or two buckets of conglomerate into Bledsoe’s truck, and as he swung his crane for another bucket, he observed Bledsoe lying in the rut or track used by the truck delivering wet gravel to the stockpile. The defendant’s truck at the time .driven by Hawks, was parallel with Bledsoe’s truck but extended some ten feet nearer the stockpile. Lockhart. had not observed Bledsoe get out of his truck but saw him lying in the rut used by the unloading truck. He hollered at Hawks to get Hawks to stop — -when Hawks stopped he saw Bledsoe lying near Hawks’ truck.

Hawks testified that on the day of the accident he was hauling wet gravel from the plant to the stockpile-, and as he approached the stockpile he observed the Bledsoe truck immediately in front of the loading crane. Hawks’ truck made a circle and backed into the rut to the left of Bledsoe’s truck, which was parked in the right rut. Hawks stated that immediately before backing toward the stockpile he could see both ruts or tracks but as his truck approached the pile he could not see behind his truck. He stated: “I could see all the ruts except directly behind my truck. About ten feet behind my truck there was a blind spot behind the truck.”

The defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was overruled. The case was submitted to a jury which returned a verdict in plaintiff’s favor in the sum of $10,000.

In our view of the case the refusal of the trial court to sustain defendant’s "motion for a directed verdict was proper. The deceased was upon plaintiff’s premises on a business transaction. As an invitee the defendant owed Bledsoe' the duty to take reasonable care to keep the premises in such a state that the invitee would not be unreasonably exposed to a known danger known by defendant and unknown by the deceased.

There is proof supported- by defendant’s witness, Hawks, that he had on. previous occasions hauled wet gravel from the ¡washer to- the-stockpile; that on the day of. .the accident he,was .making a trip. *589 to the stockpile on an average of every ten or fifteen minutes.

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Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 32, 267 P.2d 586, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunagan-v-bledsoe-okla-1954.