Gremillion v. American Creosote Works

14 So. 2d 72, 1943 La. App. LEXIS 351
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 21, 1943
DocketNo. 17935.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 14 So. 2d 72 (Gremillion v. American Creosote Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gremillion v. American Creosote Works, 14 So. 2d 72, 1943 La. App. LEXIS 351 (La. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Oda J. Gremillion, a cross-tie inspector employed by the United States Government, sustained physical injuries while he was inspecting cross-ties at the manufacturing and creosoting plant of American Creosote Works, Inc., at Southport, Jefferson Parish, La. In this suit he seeks recovery in damages from the said corporation and its insurer, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, solidarily.

There was a judgment dismissing plaintiff's suit and he has appealed.

The accident occurred at about 7:30 o'clock on the morning of August 14, 1941. At the time, the creosote plant was preparing wooden cross-ties for the United States Government.

The Government had established certain specifications as to size, shape and density of the ties, and it required that on one side of each tie there should be cut two slots or "daps" of a specified size and depth so that there might be thus furnished a uniform, flat surface for the steel rails which were to be laid thereon. These daps were cut by what is known as an adzing machine composed of two cutting devices, spaced at the proper distance apart so as to cut them on the under side of each tie as it passed over this machine on a continuous conveyor. The ties were not manufactured by the creosote plant but were bought from tie-makers and shipped into the plant in railroad freight cars. The adzing machine was located on the platform or floor of an open railroad car. The car containing the ties was located on another track alongside of and parallel to the track on which was the car on which the adzing machine was located, and on still another track, also alongside and also parallel, there were "tram" cars or large rolling iron baskets into which the "dapped" ties passed and in which they were stacked. In these trams or rolling iron baskets, the ties were then carried into the creosoting cylinder in which they were soaked with creosote under heavy pressure.

Gremillion was assigned to this plant by the United States Government and it was his duty to make certain that the minimum requirements of the contract were met, and it was proper for him to watch each tie as it passed through or over the adzing machines to make certain that the daps were of the proper size and depth. The ties were hewn and not sawed and, therefore, were not of the exact uniform, rectangular dimensions which is found in sawed ties, and, because of this, they did not stack in the tram with absolute uniformity or regularity. Although it is required that they be 8 ft. 6 inches in length, it is conceded that 1 inch more or less did not justify their being classified as defective, and that some of them were thus slightly longer than others.

At the time of the accident, Gremillion was standing on the ground between the track on which the adzing machine was located and that on which the tram was placed, and his back was towards the tram. In the tram were two employees of the creosote plant whose duty it was to stack the *Page 74 ties as they descended into the tram from the conveyor which had passed them over the knives of the adzing machine.

Each tram has curving sides which extend some 5 feet or so above the ground, and each tram is long enough to contain two stacks of ties laid end to end, parallel with the rails of the track on which the tram rolls. The creosoting cylinder is round and the trams are rolled into it through a door at one end. In order to utilize the entire inside space of the cylinder and to insure efficient creosoting, the tram, as we have said, is made with round sides conforming with the rounded shape of the cylinder and the ties are stacked into the trams with the top of each stack elevated or extended considerably above the sides and rounded so as to slope from the extreme height in the middle towards the sides, so that as each loaded tram is viewed from the end it has a rounded appearance, the lower half or two-thirds of the curve being produced by the rounded sides or arms of the tram, and the upper portion being produced by the rounded top of each stack of ties.

Now as to the occurrence of the accident: The particular tram which was involved in the accident had been placed opposite the conveyor and one stack of ties had been completely loaded into it. Of this stack, as we have said, a part of the upper ties extended above the sides. The tram had then been moved so that the unloaded end of it was opposite the conveyor and other ties had been dropped into that end. When that end had been partially loaded, a tie, coming off the conveyor into that end of the tram, struck the end of one of the top ties of the loaded stack, and this caused that top tie to fall from its position. It struck Gremillion in the back, knocked him to the ground and caused the injuries for which recovery is sought.

Some of the witnesses say that each tie weighs 125 pounds and some estimate the weight as high as 225 pounds.

Plaintiff's petition contains many charges of negligence:

1. That such an accident could have been made impossible had there been inserted a guide or guides along the sides of the conveyor which would have controlled the lateral position of each tie as it left the conveyor;

2. That the two laborers, whose duty it was to stack the ties in the tram, could have prevented such an accident by properly grasping each tie firmly and carefully and by thus preventing it from striking any other tie;

3. That such an accident could have been made impossible had each completed stack of ties been bound with wire as soon as all of the ties in that stack had been loaded into the tram;

4. That such an accident would not be possible were it not for the fact that the ties were stacked in the trams higher than the sides of the trams;

5. That the ties should not have been stacked irregularly but should have been placed in a regular and compact unit;

6. That the accident would not have occurred had the tram been placed properly opposite the conveyor so that the descending ties could not have struck those ties which were already loaded in the other stack; and

7. That this particular accident could have been avoided had plaintiff been warned of the danger or had he been warned by one of the other employees that one of the ties was about to fall on him.

Defendants, denying that there was any negligence, and, in the alternative, averring that if there was any such negligence, the proximate cause of the accident was the contributory negligence of plaintiff, himself, set forth the following charges of contributory negligence of which they allege plaintiff was guilty:

1. That plaintiff, an experienced Government inspector, was familiar with the operation of the plant and that he had been on this particular work for a sufficient time to have acquired full knowledge concerning its dangers and hazards;

2. That plaintiff voluntarily placed himself in a hazardous position which was not required by the work which he was performing but which he should have known was very dangerous;

3. That the employees of the creosote plant warned plaintiff of the danger of his position but that in spite of this he persisted in exposing himself to obvious danger; and

4. That there were many other safe places in which he could have stood and that, therefore, he was negligent in remaining in that dangerous location.

If, on the part of Gremillion, there was negligence without which the accident would not have occurred, then even if in one or more of the particulars charged *Page 75 there was primary negligence on the part of the creosote company, there can be no recovery.

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Bluebook (online)
14 So. 2d 72, 1943 La. App. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gremillion-v-american-creosote-works-lactapp-1943.