Fredericks v. Fort Dodge Brick & Tile Co.

131 N.W. 766, 151 Iowa 637
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 10, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 131 N.W. 766 (Fredericks v. Fort Dodge Brick & Tile Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fredericks v. Fort Dodge Brick & Tile Co., 131 N.W. 766, 151 Iowa 637 (iowa 1911).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

The defendant is a corporation engaged in the manufacture of hrick and tile and procures the material therefor from a pit or excavation near by. The material is shoveled into wheelbarrows which are wheeled to a platform and dumped into cars, on which it is hauled where needed. Five to eight men were employed in shoveling, and others, by blasting and the use of picks, bars, or shovels, loosened the clay from the bank. This bank was fifty or sixty feet high, and plaintiff who had been employed as a sho.veler about a year and a half, on July 3, 1908, while shoveling clay on his wheelbarrow at the foot of the bank, was struck by a mass of clay cleaving therefrom, and seriously injured. The bank was being removed from the south so that the surface from which clay [639]*639was being taken faced tbe sun. It was composed of strata of yellow clay, sbale and black sticky clay known as rubber clay. The latter was about twelve or fifteen feet from tbe top, and when wet was tenacious, and not easily handled, but when dry crumbled readily. A blast bad been fired tbe day before and as usual left tbe surface with protruding pieces of earth or clay. Ellinger fired tbe blast, and with tbe assistance of Kemp and sometimes of Eessel, removed tbe loose pieces and protruding masses so that tbey would not fall on laborers below. All these were ■removed except a bulging mass of tbe black clay extending a foot and a half from tbe surface, as testified by defendant’s witnesses, and estimated at three feet by plaintiff and according to Eessel five feet long, which after repeated efforts tbey were unable to detach. Ellinger bad tried to pry it off at four different times. Eessel bad assisted him at about 8 o’clock that morning. They had driven their bars four or five inches deep one on each side and together attempted to pry it off. Tbe evidence also tended to show that there bad been some attempt to undermine it. Tbe plaintiff bad been working about thirty feet from a point below this protruding mass in tbe forenoon and bad been shoveling scattered pieces of dirt until ■ about 2:30 or 3 o’clock in tbe afternoon when, according to bis testimony, Eessel directed him to work at tbe bank below tbe protruding black clay. He bad worked there but a short time when it fell. William Fessel was vice, president and director of tbe defendant company, and according to tbe testimony “was bead man in tbe work in tbe clay pit and gave all directions as to the work mentioned.” Tbe evidence was such that tbe jury might have found not only that Fessel gave tbe order, but also that be knew that tbe place was dangerous for that tbe protruding clay was likely to fall at any time. Plaintiff was aware that efforts had been made to remove this, but testified that be was without knowledge of any -danger in working where be did. It [640]*640was the duty of Ellinger to warn the men in the pit of any danger from falling clay and to advise them when such danger ceased. The plaintiff had been told by Eessel that Ellinger would watch the bank, saying: “Go ahead and work.' George will watch the bank.” Ellinger testified: “When there was any danger I told them to look out.” Though the mass of clay was not removed by the use of bars or picks, the evidence discloses that it might have been dislodged by blasting. The day was very warm, and evidently the rubber clay which was ordinarily wet, •sticky, and tenacious, had dried out. Ellinger’s testimony and that of several experts tended to show that “leaving a bulging mass exposed and especially with the conditions resulting from the rise of bars, leaving holes therein, would cause it when exposed to the sun for some time to crack and fall.”

J. Master aND sonIiNinju?yT instruction. I. The court instructed the jury that unless the bulging mass of rubber clay presented an unusual condition the plaintiff could not recover. This was on the theory that plaintiff had been employed in the pit a year and a half, and was familiar with all the conditions ordinarily incident to the removal of clay from the embankment, and for this reason must be held to have assumed the risks of injury therefrom. Of course, if the conditions were unusual, the inference that he knew of and appreciated the danger would not follow. It is contended that such a situation was neither alleged nor proven. It was stated in the petition that the place where plaintiff was directed to work was unusually and extraordinarily dangerous and hazardous, and that the bank where he was working was in a dangerous and defective condition, all of which defendant knew and of which plaintiff was unaware. The condition then was described, and, while the words “unusual condition” may not appear in the petition, the facts alleged clearly so assert. Nor ought it to be said that there was no evidence to support such alie[641]*641gation. While the bank after each, blast was rough and uneven with pieces of clay protruding, these ordinarily were readily removed by Ellinger and his assistants. The bulging mass in question had not yielded to the efforts of these men, and was left hanging contrary to custom, and in being allowed to remain presented a condition unusual and with the dangers of which the men in the pit might-have been found to have been unfamiliar. There was no-error.

2. Same: safe place to work: duty to warn. II. But three grounds of negligence were submitted to the jury. The first of these was that “defendant was negligent in directing plaintiff to occupy a position and to work at a place at the foot of said bank beneath a part thereof, which was in such condition that the same was likely to cave or fall therefrom and without giving plaintiff warning.”' The evidence warranted a finding that Eessel was in full control of the work with authority to direct plaintiff and other employees what work to do, when and at what particular place to do it. The court instructed that if Eessel did direct the plaintiff to work in a place where there was overhanging the plaintiff a portion of the bank of clay of an unusual character, and not incident to the work then in hand that was likely to fall on the plaintiff to his injury, and that the said Eessel did in fact know of such dangerous condition, or by the exercise of reasonable prudence and ordinary care, and as a person of ordinary intelligence, should have known thereof, and gave the plain1 tiff no warning thereof, such would be an act of negligence on the part of the defendant, and for which the defendant would be liable for any injuries resulting therefrom as a direct consequence thereof.

This instruction is criticised for that there was no evi-' dence of the existence of an unusual condition, and that the direction was merely as to a detail of doing the- work which the company might delegate. But, as said, the jury. [642]*642might have found the condition unusual, and if Bessel, with knowledge thereof and that such condition involved danger in that the protruding mass of clay was likely to fall at any moment, and was aware or ought to have been aware that plaintiff did not appreciate such danger, then clearly he was not directing him as to a mere detail of the work, but with reference to a situation not- involved in the ordinary routine of employment. As said in Schminkey v. Sinclair & Co., 137 Iowa, 130, “It is plainly the duty of the master to warn his employees of these new and latent dangers and this duty can not be delegated to another in such a manner as to relieve the ordinary master from the results of nonperformance.” Hardy v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 149 Iowa, 41, is directly in point.

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Bluebook (online)
131 N.W. 766, 151 Iowa 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fredericks-v-fort-dodge-brick-tile-co-iowa-1911.