Golley & Finley Iron Works v. Callan

9 Ohio C.C. 217
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedOctober 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ohio C.C. 217 (Golley & Finley Iron Works v. Callan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Golley & Finley Iron Works v. Callan, 9 Ohio C.C. 217 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Haynes, J.

This is a petition in error filed to reverse the court of common pleas in an action brought by Charles S. Callan against the defendant, The Golley & Finley Iron Works.

The case is brought before us on the record which includes a bill of exceptions. The bill of exceptions shows there were three exceptions taken during the progress of the trial to questions which were propounded to the witness by the plaintiff below.

It is sufficient to say that we have examined these questions and are of the opinion that there is no such error that requires the interposition of this court in regard to them.

The main question of the case is whether the petition states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

A demurrer was interposed in the court of common pleas to the petition, and that demurrer was overruled, and thereafter an answer was filed by the defendant, and the case went to trial and a verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff below.

I will read the petition : “The plaintiff, Charles C. Callan, says that the defendant is a co-partnership formed for the purpose of and doing business in the state of Ohio and not incorporated, and that the firm-name is The Golley & Finley Iron Works. That on or about the 7th day of April, 1893, plaintiff was in the employ of said defendant in its shop at Cygnet, Ohio, in the capacity of helper to the workmen then and there employed by the defendant in repairing boilers and other [218]*218like service, and the plaintiff was then and there under charge and direction of one John J. Hartican, the foreman and superintendent of defendant’s said workmen, shop and business, and the plaintiff being directed by said superintendent so to do, and having no knowledge or warning of the danger thereof, helped said workmen about cutting the heads off the stay-bolts of a certain boiler, then and there being repaired, which said boiler said John J. Hartican had then and there carelessly and negligently caused and permitted to lie in an improper and dangerous position for said work, and for the workmen engaged thereon, and by reason of the said negligence of said John J. Hartican in so directing said plaintiff to perform said service while said boiler was lying in said position, whereby said work was made dangerous as aforesaid. And while plaintiff was so engaged in said work under the direction of said John J. Hartican, a piece of metal was detached from the head of one of the stay-bolts, and with great force, violence and swiftness, struck and penetrated plaintiff’s right eye, causing him great pain and permanently destroying the sight of the eye, and causing him to lose much time and labor and wages, amounting to sixty dollars, and to be obliged to pay surgeons’ bills and other necessary expenses in efforts to get cured, amounting to forty dollars, and causing other loss and damage, amounting in all to five thousand dollars.

“Wherefore plaintiff prays that he may recover from said de- * fendant said sum of five thousand dollars, his said damages so as aforesaid sustained.”

We have examined this petition with a good deal of care, and it has caused us considerable discussion. This court likes to see a good pleading, in which the facts are clearly stated and sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

In the case of Coal & Car Co. v. Norman, in 49 Ohio State Reports, page 598, the case in which the Supreme Court reversed the case for insufficiency of pleading, the court says: “The servant, in order to recover for defects in the appliances of the business, is called on to establish three propo[219]*219sitions: 1st, That the appliance was defective. 2d, That the master had notice thereof, or knowledge, or ought to have had. 3rd, That the servant did not know of the defect, and had not equal means of knowing with the master, and it is elementary in the law of pleading that whatever a party is required to prove in order to make out his claim must be averred.”

The code provides that the plaintiff must set out the facts (in a plain and concise manner) which constitute his cause of action.

Now, the plaintiff has averred in this case, “ that he was a helper to the workmen employed in the shop of the defendant, in the repair of boilers and other like services; that he was under the charge and direction of John J. Hartican, the foreman and superintendent of the workmen and business, and that being directed by said superintendent so to do, and having no knowledge or warning of the danger thereof, helped said workmen about cutting the heads off of the stay-bolts of a certain boiler then and there being repaired, which said boiler said John J. Hartican had then and there carelessly and negligently caused and permitted to lie in an improper and dangerous position for said work.”

Now, that of course is his first item of charge against the-defendants; that is, that they did allow the boiler on which he was to work to lie in an improper and dangerous position for said work; and he further says: “that by reason of said negligence of said John J. Hartican, in so directing said plaintiff to perform said service while said boiler was lying in said position, whereby said work was made dangerous as aforesaid, and while plaintiff was so engaged in said work, under the direction of said John J. Hartican, a piece of metal was-detached from the head of said stay-bolts.”

Now, he has alleged that the boiler had been placed in an improper position for the work and for the workmen engaged upon it, and that he was directed by Hartican to work upon that boiler, and that he was injured by the negligence of Har[220]*220ti can in directing him to perform such service while said boiler was lying in said position, whereby said work was made dangerous as aforesaid, and while he was so engaged in said work a piece of metal was detached from the head of one of said stay-bolts, and with great force, violence and swiftness struck and penetrated his right eye, destroying the sight of the same.

These averments, if you notice, are all of them a sort of recitation instead of the better and clearer way of averment. But passing that by, the objection is made, and the objection is, that the petition does not set out the manner in which the worlc was to be done under the direction of the foreman; and secondly, that the detaching of the piece of metal, and the flying of the same against the eye of the plaintiff, was the result of the imperfect and improper manner in which the boiler was placed.

It is argued on behalf of the plaintiff in error, that they had no knowledge from that petition of the line of evidence that was to be followed by the plaintiff in establishing his case. That as a matter of fact, when he came to place his case before the jury, he offered evidence tending to show that what he was ordered to do was to stand upon this, boiler while the work was being performed, which brought him in a position where he was directly over the worlc; and that in the performance of that work Hartican himself held an instrument or chisel, known as a “ set,” against the stay-bolt, while plaintiff was required to strike the set ” with a sledge-hammer — the work being done was the loosening and taking out of a firebox of a boiler.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Ohio C.C. 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golley-finley-iron-works-v-callan-ohiocirct-1894.