Federal Compress Co. v. Craig

7 So. 2d 532, 192 Miss. 689, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 60
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1942
DocketNo. 34813.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 7 So. 2d 532 (Federal Compress Co. v. Craig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Federal Compress Co. v. Craig, 7 So. 2d 532, 192 Miss. 689, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 60 (Mich. 1942).

Opinions

Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the occasion in question there were stored in the compress, owned and operated by appellant, about 15,006 bales of ginned cotton, not yet compressed. These bales *695 were stacked or piled in tiers, each tier composed as follows : The bottom bale on the floor was placed standing on end. The height of a bale standing on end is approximately 56 inches. Next to this bale and against it another bale was placed also standing on its end. On top of these two bales, two other bales were placed end npon end, as a second deck, which raised the height to 112 inches. On top of these end-to-end bales, a third deck of bales was placed, lying npon their flat sides. The width of a bale, from one flat side to the other, is 30 inches. This would make the height of the tier 142 inches. The tiers were thus two bales wide and three bales high, and were continued in length as desired, it appearing that the particular tier here involved was about 40 feet long from east to west.

Between these tiers were aisles each of sufficient width to permit the bales in the tiers to be taken down into the aisles, and when taken down to be carried through the aisles to the press by hand trucks. On August 7, 1939', appellant was putting the cotton through the press in anticipation of the approaching crop, and four of its employees assisted by a foreman were engaged in breaking out tier 14, that is to say, they were taking down the cotton in that tier, and trucking the bales to the press. Two of them, at the particular time here under consideration, were trucking, while appellee and another were taking down the bales from the second deck of the tier.

As is manifest from the situation, the top bales, those lying on their flat sides, must be taken off first before those next below them in the second deck can be handled. But it appears that the customary method followed by appellant in breaking out the tiers was not to remove first all the top bales in a particular tier, but the method pursued was to start at one end of the tier and, proceeding thence toward the other end, to remove for several feet the top bales, and thereupon to follow progressively from the end of the tier by removing the second deck of the bales, which was done by two employees on the floor, one *696 on each side of the hale, who, with cotton hooks and working jointly, would tilt the bale to the floor.

On the morning when this injury occurred, the crew had started at the east end of the tier, and the top bales had been thrown off for a distance of several feet west of where appellee was injured. Appellee and a fellow employee, as heretofore mentioned, were breaking out the second deck, and, according to the evidence in appellee’s behalf, while appellee was on the floor of the aisle with his back to the west, and had hold of a bale of the second deck with a cotton hook, his co-worker cooperating with him on the other side of the same bale, one Nassar, who was the foreman of the crew, threw off a bale from the top of the tier a few feet west of where appellee was then working, and the thrown bale bounced and struck or fell upon appellee, causing a serious personal injury.

There is sufficient evidence from which a jury could find that it was the custom in this work that when a bale was about to be thrown from the top, a warning shout such as “lookout” would be given by the person who was about to throw the bale into the aisle below, or that it would be given by some person so placed as to give this warning; but the testimony strongly preponderates that no such warning was given on the instance in question. And the evidence is sufficient to sustain a finding, if the jury should so find, that while appellee was busily engaged in handling a bale in the second deck in the customary manner, by which at the time it was necessary that his back be turned to the west, the bale which injured him was, without warning, thrown off the top from the west and to his back, when and where he did not see it, and could not see it and at the same time do his work, and that as a reasonably prudent employer, appellant should have reasonably foreseen that an injury such as did happen was likely to occur from such a course or method of doing this work.

The rule applicable to such a case is summarized in McLemore & McArthur v. Rogers, 169 Miss. 650, 152 So. *697 883, 884, which was a case where, in the course of the work, and as a consequence of the method of work being there pursued, fragments of concrete were thrown from above striking a workman below, and of this the court said: “The general principle is that, where the master has used reasonable care to furnish a reasonably safe place to work, the character of the work considered, and like care to furnish reasonably safe appliances with which to work, the duty rests upon the servant to take care of himself as to all the ordinary and obvious dangers which arise in the progress of the work. . . . The converse is equally true that, where • the master places his servant at a place and in a character of work which exposes the servant to hazards against which the servant cannot, by the use of due care, protect himself and at the same time do his work, the master must then take reasonable care to warn the servant or to erect guards, if either of these are reasonably practicable, and, if not, the master must so order and control the method of the work as to obviate the danger, so far as reasonably practicable. ’ ’ This announcement was reaffirmed in Ross v. Louisville & N. R. Co., 178 Miss. 69, 172 So. 752.

The questions are therefore, first, whether the servant, considering his experience and the character of the work, could or could not by the use of due care protect himself and at the same time do his work; and if this issue be resolved in favor of the servant, then second, whether there were available means or methods, reasonably practicable, by which the master in the exercise of reasonable care could and should have avoided the danger to his servant. As said in Eagle Cotton Oil Co. v. Pickett, 175 Miss. 577, 585, 166 So. 764, 766, that while “danger does not create liability, but the failure of the master to exercise ordinary or reasonable care to protect his servants from the dangers necessarily incident to their employment does create liability, and we think that under the facts here in evidence it was the province of the jury to sav whether or not, in adopting a plan or method of *698 performing the work . . . the appellant exercised reasonable care.” And if a reasonably safe plan or method is reasonably available and practicable, it is the nondelegable duty of the master to use reasonable care to see to it that such a plan or method is established, not only, but that at all times it shall be actually maintained, carried out and observed. Albert v. Doullut & Ewin, 180 Miss. 626, 178 So. 312. These are jury questions to be determined under appropriate instructions, and from the nature of such a case it is manifest that particular care must be taken that the instructions are properly drawn.

From what has been said, it would follow that the verdict and judgment in favor of appellee might be allowed to stand, except for the following features, which are now necessary to be considered.

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Bluebook (online)
7 So. 2d 532, 192 Miss. 689, 1942 Miss. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-compress-co-v-craig-miss-1942.