Gribben v. Yellow Aster Mining & Milling Co.

75 P. 839, 142 Cal. 248, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 925
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1904
DocketL.A. No. 1221.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 75 P. 839 (Gribben v. Yellow Aster Mining & Milling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gribben v. Yellow Aster Mining & Milling Co., 75 P. 839, 142 Cal. 248, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 925 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, J.

The action is to recover damages for personal injuries occasioned to the plaintiff by the breaking of a rope by which he was being lowered to the bottom of a shaft while in the employ of the defendant corporation. Verdict and judgment went for the plaintiff in the court below, and defendant appeals from said judgment and from the order denying a motion' for a new trial.

In the specifications on the part of the defendant in its statement on motion for a new trial it is claimed: 1. That there is no evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant ; that the evidence proved that the accident alleged, which resulted in the injury to the plaintiff, was caused by the negligence of the plaintiff and the negligent acts of the fellow-servants engaged with the plaintiff in the same general employment; 2. Alleged erroneous rulings of the court during the progress of the trial and the introduction of evidence; and 3. Certain instructions given by the court to the jury.

1. The plaintiff testified that he was employed by the defendant on the twenty-eighth day of July, 1900, at Randsburg. He said he was sent down to the well to help them down there near what is called Goler, six or seven miles from Randsburg, *251 where the company was doing work, laying the foundation for a pump, reservoir, etc. He said he was directed to go down into the gravel-pit to take out some gravel to get ready for the concrete for said foundation. It appears there was a shaft about twenty feet in depth, and from the foot of the shaft were drifts in opposite directions some ten feet or more from the foot of the shaft, and the gravel was taken from these drifts and hoisted up the shaft by means of a rope and bucket. The drifts were six or seven feet high. He says the way he was lowered, he put his foot in a loop of the rope and was lowered by the men at the windlass at the top of the shaft by allowing the rope to unwind; and on the day in question, while he was being lowered, the rope broke and he was dropped down and his leg injured, or, as he says, “smashed up.” On cross-examination he was asked: “Did any one tell you to go down on that rope?—A. They told me to go down and take out gravel. That was the only way to get down there.— Q. Did you see any ladders down there ?—A. No. There was no ladders in the hole.—Q. Were there no ladders around the hole?—A. I don’t know. I didn’t look to see whether there was any on top or not.” The only other witness on the part of the plaintiff was the physician who treated him, and who testified to the extent of the injuries he received from the fall by the breaking of the rope. The only witnesses on the part of the defendant as to the accident were Robert Smith and Dan McCusker, employees of the defendant, with the plaintiff at the time, but who were not in the employ of the defendant at the time of the trial. Smith testified that he had been working for the defendant corporation from the beginning of the May previous, and that the rope on which the plaintiff went down the shaft was there to hoist gravel with. On the cross-examination of this witness, however, it was shown that there were ladders furnished, and were at the place, if the employees wanted to use them, for the purpose of going down the shaft. He was asked: “Do you know why the rope broke?—• A. By wearing against the top of the drift, sir.—Q. How was the break?—A. Well, it got pretty well wore and it was pulled right in two the same as you would pull a piece of rope out when it was pretty well wore, right in two. I don’t know how long the rope had been used on that windlass. We had *252 been working on the windlass about seven or eight days.” McCusker testified on behalf of the defendant that he was working at the place with the plaintiff in July at the time of the accident, and says that “It was a new rope, first-class rope, couldn’t be no better rope bought. Everything that come down there was first-class material for that work. It had been used there about three weeks' before it broke.— Q. What was the cause of the breaking of that rope if you know?—A. From dragging the bucket in on that drift, and ■—dragging and scraping on the roof of the drift as it come in. The roof of the drift was gravel and jagged rocks and sand. The rope was a good rope, only that one place that they dragged it on the roof of that drift. If it had not dragged there it wouldn’t have broke. It would have carried up a ton. It was a new rope.” He was asked whether there was any other means by which the men could get down the shaft other than by the rope. “A. Why, there was ladders there within ten feet of them they could have put down if they had wanted to.” On cross-examination the witness was asked: “Why do you mention a ladder? Were you told to go down on a ladder?—A. Well, the ladders was there for that purpose.—Q. How do you know that?—A. Why, they were made for that—the' foreman of the mine; and I throwed them away there.—Q. Were the ladders ever used for that purpose at all?—A. Well, they was put down the shaft when he got his leg broke.” It appears further that there was a wheelbarrow at the foot of the shaft and a plank running out into the drift for the purpose of bringing the gravel from the end of the drift to the foot of the shaft to be placed in the bucket and hoisted to the top, but the employees, including the plaintiff, hauled the bucket back from the foot of the shaft to the end of the drift and there filled the bucket. Further, on cross-examination, the witness was asked: “Did you examine where the break occurred, whether broken off short, or whether it was one strand broken in one place, and another strand broken in another place?—A. It was a long break. Just pulled apart, the way it was sawed off when they had it on the top of the drift.—Q. How is that?—A. The top of the drift sawed it off, and that was a long—the parting was long, you know; it did n’t break off short.—Q. Well, now the edges where it broke in two, were they at all square?—A. No, sir; *253 it was not.—Q. Well, how is that?—A. Because it was wore. It was ragged, some parts of the rope was thinner than others, where it dragged. It wore worse in one place, may be, than it did in another, may be it had a little more friction on it, you know, and it might.—Q. Well, your idea, then, is that the reason it broke was because it was worn ?—A. Worn on— dragging on the top of the roof of that drift. And they pulled the bucket in, as well as the—they all pulled it in— they every one pulled it in. If the man went and took the gravel out to the main shaft and put it in the bucket and h’ist it up in the bucket, it was perfectly safe.—Q. That is the way you think it became worn?—A. That is the way it broke and that is the way the accident happened. There is no better rope was ever put in a shaft than that was, and that was the way it was broke. It was their fault.” Witness Smith was asked: “Why did you put the gravel into the bucket inside of the drift and drag it out through the drift into the bottom of the shaft by the rope, instead of by carrying it out on a wheelbarrow ?—A. Well, because it was easier to do that way..” There was no evidence in conflict with the above.

2. The court in its rulings and instructions followed the plaintiff’s theory of the accident, and held substantially that it was quite immaterial whether ladders were furnished for going down the shaft, or whether the rope became weakened through improper use of it by the plaintiff and other employees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 P. 839, 142 Cal. 248, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gribben-v-yellow-aster-mining-milling-co-cal-1904.