Erickson v. Meier & Frank Co.

18 P.2d 207, 142 Or. 76, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 217
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 18 P.2d 207 (Erickson v. Meier & Frank Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erickson v. Meier & Frank Co., 18 P.2d 207, 142 Or. 76, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 217 (Or. 1932).

Opinion

*77 KELLY, J.

Defendant is a corporation engaged in the operation of a department store in Portland. On the morning of December 18, 1929, plaintiff was riding upon an anto truck belonging to defendant. Plaintiff was then an employee of defendant and his duties were to assist in making delivery of furniture and other merchandise. A Mr. Leonhardt, now deceased, was the driver of the truck. Plaintiff and Leonhardt had left defendant’s warehouse at about 8:45 on the morning in question to make deliveries in the vicinity of Garden Home, and, at about 10:45 in the forenoon, they were returning to the city with other deliveries to be made.

Taking plaintiff’s testimony at par, as we must, in determining the propriety of the court’s ruling upon defendant’s motion for nonsuit, the record discloses that, at the time of the accident, plaintiff was sitting beside the driver looking at an order book to determine where the next delivery was to be made. The truck was being driven along the Garden Home road toward Portland at from fifteen to twenty miles per hour. The road was macadam, 16 feet wide, on a slightly descending grade. It was smooth, with no rocks, bumps or ruts. Within three or four feet of the westerly side of the road, there was a very steep bank extending drnvn from the surface of the highway a distance of from twenty to twenty-five feet. Suddenly, the left front portion of the truck dropped down on the highway, the rim and tire of the left front wheel having come off. The truck then veered to the left across the highway and over the bank, and plaintiff received personal injuries.

Shortly after the accident, the head mechanic of respondent arrived from Portland, and, while looking *78 over the ground at the place of the accident, found a lug and a nut which afterwards he gave to plaintiff. Immediately after the accident, the smaller rim of the wheel was found at a point about twenty-five or thirty feet from the place where the truck went over the bank; and several other lugs and nuts were found at the place of the accident.

Plaintiff claims that the truck was defective and in an unsafe condition for use, and that defendant failed to exercise reasonable care in respect to furnishing a safe truck with which to carry on its work.

The record also discloses that defendant maintained a garage and repair shop where defendant repaired its trucks. In that department, there were two day mechanics and six night men.

The question involved is whether the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur may be involked in this case. We are not unmindful that many cases may be found holding that this maxim never applies in a master and servant ease. On the other hand, there are many master and servant cases wherein it has been applied. 4 Labatt’s Master & Servant, pp. 4864, et seq., section 1601 and cases there cited; 6 L. R. A. (N. S.) 337; 16 L. R. A. (N. S.) 214. The latter class of cases, in our opinion, is supported by the better reasoning. As stated by Mr. Labatt (ibid):

“No satisfactory reason is given why the maxim should not apply in such cases, although its application is somewhat restricted because of the subsidiary rules governing such relationship”.

Among the many cases cited in note 10 of section 1601, Labatt on Master & Servant, supra, are six which we deem especially worthy of notice here.

*79 One of these six is the case of Folk v. Schaeffer, 186 Pa. 263 (40 Atl. 401), wherein it was shown that the plaintiff was on an elevated platform, assisting fellow workmen in raising from the ground, 60 feet below, a hood, which was to be placed on the top of a smokestack. The block and tackle in use were fastened to the top of a piece of timber 14 feet long and 4 inches square, which stood on the platform, and was held in place by guy lines. One of the guy lines consisted of two pieces of rope tied together. The knot by which they were tied became undone or slipped, and the weight of the hood drew the timber against the stack, and the plaintiff, who was standing under the block and tackle, was struck, and thrown to the ground. The work preliminary to hoisting the hood was done under the supervision of one of the defendants, who gave directions as to the size of the timber to be selected from a pile in the yard, as to the ropes to be used for guys and who tied the knot which slipped and caused the accident. There was no direct proof of want of care in tying the knot.

The court there held that the conclusion that the knot was improperly tied was an inference from the fact that it became untied. The court then said:

“Ordinarily, an accident would not have happened as this did, if care had been exercised in tying the ropes. There was no difficulty in making them secure. Under the circumstances shown by the plaintiff, the burden was thrown on the defendants to show that due care had been used, and, in the absence of any explanation, the jury might infer want of care. The defendants were not bound satisfactorily to explain the cause of the accident, but they were bound to rebut the presumption of negligence arising from the attendant circumstances ’ ’.

*80 Another of the six cases mentioned is Winkelmann & Brown Drug Co. v. Colladay, 88 Md. 78 (40 Atl. 1078). There the evidence disclosed that the plaintiff was a yonng man 24 years of age, and had been employed by the defendant company about six years at its place of business, in Baltimore. At the time of the accident he had charge of the patent-medicine floor, which was on the second story of a five-story warehouse, where it was his duty to fill orders for medicines, and to send them down to the first floor by means of an elevator or dumb-waiter. This apparatus is described as a shaft running from the cellar to the fifth story of the warehouse, within which two boxes made of oak, each weighing about 40 pounds, are used as dumb-waiters, for hoisting to the upper floors, and lowering to the floors below, the goods that are needed from time to time to fill orders. There are speaking tubes between the first and other floors, except the second, and the employees on the first and second floors were compelled to use the shaft as a means of communication in giving orders from one floor to the other. ‘‘ The plaintiff stated the way we got orders out from the second floor, — the only way we could communicate from' the second floor to the others, we had to incline our head in the shaft of the dumb-waiter. The reason we had to do that was to get the sound. We could not hear what the orders were, because there was such a draught coming up there. We had no speaking tubes, and it was our place to do it”. And, as to the accident, he stated that all he knew about it was that on the 24th of November, 1894, about a quarter after five, the bell was rung for an order. “I inclined my head on the side of the shaft to get the sound of what was said,-— to find out what the order was — and just when I put *81 my head there the waiter fell from the fifth floor”. He further testified that this was the only and usual way to receive orders between the two floors, and it was the custom of the other employees to thus receive and give orders through this shaft.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 P.2d 207, 142 Or. 76, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erickson-v-meier-frank-co-or-1932.