Fowler v. Union Portland Cement Co.

117 P. 462, 39 Utah 363, 1911 Utah LEXIS 54
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 21, 1911
DocketNo. 2177
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 117 P. 462 (Fowler v. Union Portland Cement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fowler v. Union Portland Cement Co., 117 P. 462, 39 Utah 363, 1911 Utah LEXIS 54 (Utah 1911).

Opinion

McCARTY, J.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover damages from tbe defendant for tbe death of her husband, Ira A. Fowler, which resulted from injuries received February 24, 1909, through tbe falling of a steel truss which be and other employees of defendant were attempting to put in plafee at defendant’s cement plant near Devil’s Slide, Morgan County, Utah. [367]*367Tbe truss referred to weighed about 4000 pounds, and at the time of the accident was being raised by means of a derrick over and upon which was operated the ordinary block and tackle, consisting of pulleys and wire cable. The upright pole or mast of the derrick was about sixty feet high, and was held in place by guy wires. The height of the arm, or boom, of the derrick from the ground was about forty-five feet. The wire cable, which was from one-half inch to three-fourths of an inch in diameter, wound around a drum which was operated by a stationary engine on the ground. From the drum the cable ran up the mast and along the boom of the derrick connecting with a movable oar or carrier and through pulleys forming a block and tackle with hook attached hanging underneath the boom to which weights were attached when being raised. The cable finally passed through a hole at the end of the boom, and was clamped with a clip. This clip, sometimes called a clamp; consisted of a TJ-bolt and shoe, ,a filler, and two burs. The burs tighten the damp upon the cable. The derrick had been erected and the cable put in place three days before the accident. Fowler, the deceased, had worked about the plant between three and four months, but had' worked with the iron workers’ gang at this particular job only a few days. He was a steady, reliable workman, but not a structural iron worker. He was one of a gang of workmen who one or two days before the accident raised and put up, with the appliances mentioned, another truss, leaving two trusses on the ground. It was one of these — the second truss that was raised — that fell. The truss was raised to a height of seventeen feet, and was suspended by the wire cable, the attached end of which slipped away from its fastenings, and the truss fell to the ground, killing Fowler almost instantly.

It is alleged, among other things in the complaint “that, in order to raise said steel trusses or beams by means of the said derrick and wire cable, it was necessary to securely attach the end of said wire cable to prevent the same from breaking or slipping away; and it was the duly of defendant company at the time herein mentioned to firmly and [368]*368securely fasten tbe said wire cable in sueb a way as to prevent its breaking or pulling away while being used.” It is further alleged “that the said defendant did not use due care in securing said wire cable, and negligently and carelessly failed to use ordinarily safe and suitable methods to secure the same, and negligently failed to use a suitable, adequate, or proper wire rope clip, or a sufficient number thereof, or to properly adjust and fasten the same, or to use any suitable or safe contrivances to secure said cable, and-that said defendant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care, could have known, that the said fastening was dangerous and insecure.” Defendant denied that it failed to exercise ordinary care, and that it knew, or in the exercise of ordinary care could have known, that the fastening on the cable was dangerous and insecure. It alleged that the appliances used were in ordinary and general use, and that they were carefully inspected, and that defendant had no- notice or knowledge of any defect, if any there was, and specially pleaded contributory negligence on the part of Fowler in unnecessarily putting himself underneath the truss and derrick.

The principal grounds upon which defendant relies for a reversal of the judgment are: (1) “'Insufficiency of the evidence to justify the submission to the jury of the question of negligence on the part of the defendant; (2) that the contributory negligence of plaintiffs intestate was fully shown by the evidence, and the verdict should have been directed for defendant.”

We will first determine whether the evidence was sufficient to justify the submission of'the case to the jury on the question of whether or not the defendant was negligent. The record shows that the end of the cable was fastened by one of the defendant’s employees, a Mr. Wagner, who was a skilled and competent structural iron worker, in the following manner: lie passed the cable through a hole in the spreader at the outer end of the boom from which the cable passed out between two angle irons horizontally fastened to the timbers which formed the boom, and, as a means of holding the cable and sustaining the weight of the truss suspended [369]*369by it, be attached a wire rope clip which rested against the spreader, the end of the rope projecting beyond the end of the boom. In order to tighten the rope clip upon the cable, an iron bolt was placed within the clip> parallel with the cable, and the clip was tightened upon both cable and bolt by means of thread burs. The clip was so constructed as to receive two strands of wire cable, but could not be tightened upon a single strand; hence the bolt mentioned was used as a filler. The pull of the cable when thus fastened was through the clip direct. The cable was put in place under the direction and in the presence of Jacob F. Snyder, defendant’s foreman. On this point Snyder testified in part as follows: “I remember, when Wagner was on the boom fixing the cable, I hallooed to him, and said: ‘George, have you got it safe now? If you ain’t, stay with it until you think you have got it safe.’ He said» it was all right. . . . I did not go up on the derrick to examine and see if it was secure, and did not see whether it was secure or not, only at a distance. From that distance (where he was standing) I could not see how it was fastened.” He further testified: “Q. The ordinary method, then, would be, instead of using this piece of iron (referring to the bolt used as a filler), to bring the cable back and form a loop, put the other end of the cable within the rope dip', and screw it up on two ends (strands) of the cable ? A. Yes, sir. Q. That you would call a good fastening ? A. Yes. Q. Would you call the other fastening a secure fastening? Let the cable run straight through in this way. between the rope clip with a filler . . without a double cable? A. I don’t know as I would. Q. On the other hand, you would say, wouldn’t you, Mr. Synder, that that wasn’t a good way to fasten a cable on a derrick? You would not have done it that way yourself if you had done it ? A. No.”

We are clearly of the opinion that the testimony of Snyder alone was sufficient to warrant the court in submitting to the jury the question as to whether the slipping of the cable was due to negligence of the defendant in 1 [370]*370failing to properly fasten tbe same, as alleged in the complaint. It is suggested by counsel for defendant that some latent defect in the rope clip, or damp by which the cable was fastened, might have been the proximate cause of the falling of the truss. In the discussion of the case in their printed brief they say: “For all that appears the inference may reasonably be made that the fall of the truss may have resulted from one of several other causes, for neither of which the defendant would be liable.

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Bluebook (online)
117 P. 462, 39 Utah 363, 1911 Utah LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowler-v-union-portland-cement-co-utah-1911.