Graham v. Brummett

181 So. 721, 182 Miss. 580, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 181
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1938
DocketNo. 33176.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 181 So. 721 (Graham v. Brummett) 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
Graham v. Brummett, 181 So. 721, 182 Miss. 580, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 181 (Mich. 1938).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Brummett, the appellee, recovered a-judgment against the appellant, Graham, for personal injuries sustained by him as the servant of the latter while about the performance of his duties.

Tersely stated, the essential facts are these; The appellee testified that there were two scaffolds, an upper scaffold approximately fourteen feet above the concrete floor of the stave mill in which he was working for the appellant; and a lower one, approximately a foot and a half below the upper scaffold; that the upper scaffold consisted of two by eight inch planks, which ran east by west, parallel with each other and approximately two feet apart; that he ascended to the upper scaffold upon a ladder which was resting aa-ainst the first board of the upper scaffold on the south side; that the ladder was near the west end of the board; that south of the upper scaffold, and east of the ladder there was a lower scaffold, the first board of which, nearest to the higher scaffold was approximately two and a half feet south of the south board of the higher scaffold, and approximately a foot and a half lower than the south board of the higher scaffold. Just north of the southernmost plank of the upper scaffold, and approximatelv six feet west of the- east side of the upper scaffold, there was a drive-shaft and wheel over which a belt ran. the wheel being approximatelv four feet in diameter. Appellee ascended the upper scaf *586 fold to adjust that belt, climbing the ladder which led to the southernmost board of the upper scaffolds, from which point he states that he stepped across on to the other boards of the upper scaffold, walked in an easterly direction down one of these boards, and stepped back across to the southernmost board of the upper scaffold, on the east side of the drive shaft wheel, where he did his work, shifting-the belt. While so engaged the superintendent, Kellogg, told him to come down and start the engine. He attempted to descend by stepping from the southernmost board of the upper scaffold to the northernmost board of the lower scaffold, which step was made from a point about two and a half feet north of, and one and a half feet higher than, the board on which he was stepping; and he testified that in the attempt to make this step the board on which he was standing slipped backward, and he fell twelve feet to the pavement below, from which fall he suffered injuries, breaking his arm, and, as he claims, injuring his back.

He further testified that there was oil and dirt on the planks of the upper scaffold, and that the plank from which he attempted to descend slipped backwards; that some weeks later he returned to the scene and found the line where the plank had slipped, and also that a new nail had been driven through the plank in question. He further testified that he was acting in obedience to the general orders of the master, Graham, that he and another were to take the place of a negro who was being discharged for the sake of economy, one of whose duties was to assist in replacing the belt of the wheel on this upper scaffold.

The jury were warranted in finding from his testimony that he slipped in undertaking to descend because of the oil and grease, and the failure of the master to have the plank nailed down, making it possible for it to slip when appellee stepped on it. Brummett gave as a reason for adopting this method of descending to the concrete floor, rather than by the way he ascended, that the point *587 was nearest to him, that he would have had to pass under the machinery by stooping while negotiating an eight-inch plank. This was the first time he had engaged in the performance of duty on the upper platform, having worked elsewhere in the mill.

His testimony and that of his son, who was a witness, was to the effect that another employe engaged in and about the work on the upper platform ordinarily used the route by which appellee undertook to descend, naming employes whom he had seen do so. Otn this point he stated that other employes went down the way he attempted to go without any objection being raised to it. He further testified that a banister should have been installed for the employes to hold to, but he is hazy as to how this could have been done, to render the descent by that route less dangerous. He also testified that the distance between the eight-inch planks laid on the upper platform was dangerous, and implied negligence.

Ealph Brummett testified that prior to the accident sustained by his father he had seen the planks vibrate and shake when the mill was in operation, and that at the place where his father slipped the planks had oil and dirt on them. He testified that he had seen other employes descending in the same manner attempted by his father — not often, only when a belt would break. Sometimes the employes would descend by the lower platform route, and sometimes by the one by which Brummett descended — that those descending by the lower platform route had to hold on to something.

¥m. H. Brummett, a son of the appellee in the employ of Graham, testified that immediately after the injury to his father he examined the platform; that the distance to step down was twenty-three inches, and that the distance between planks was twenty-seven inches. He further testified that he had seen Kellogg, the superintendent in active charge of the operation of this stave mill, descend in the manner attempted by his father; and on cross-examination said that was the usual walk-way, *588 that the plank at that end was not nailed down; that although the plank had been there three or four months it had never been nailed down, evidenced by the fact that there were no nail holes in it. This plank had slipped back from the direction in which his father was descending, and he fell.

The general tenor of appellee’s evidence was to the effect that planks on the upper platform, were too far apart; that banisters could and should have been installed to insure the safety of the employes; that the planks at and about the point of descent were covered with oil and dirt, and that the plank from which he undertook to step was loose, and had been for sometime; that the master knew, or should have known, that his employes were ordinarily using the method of descent adopted by the appellant.

All the material evidence of Brummett and his witnesses was sharply contradicted by witnesses for the appellant. For instance, the distance from the upper to the lower platform, when measured by the appellant, was ascertained' to be fifty-seven inches; the evidence for appellant tended to show that it was suicidal for a person undertaking to descend from the upper to the lower platform to take the route by which appellee attempted to descend.

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Bluebook (online)
181 So. 721, 182 Miss. 580, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-brummett-miss-1938.