Hammontree v. Cobb Const. Co.

152 So. 279, 168 Miss. 844, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 367
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1934
DocketNo. 30940.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 152 So. 279 (Hammontree v. Cobb Const. Co.) 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
Hammontree v. Cobb Const. Co., 152 So. 279, 168 Miss. 844, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 367 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee is engaged in general road construction work and on the occasion in question was laying a concrete public highway, twenty feet wide, from the Alabama line westward towards the city of Meridian. The principal machine used in this work is a large concrete mixer into which is fed, every minute and a quarter, a batch of material consisting of seven sacks of concrete, one thousand four hundred pounds of sand, and two thousand seventy *849 pounds of gravel. This mixer is placed in the middle of the twenty foot space to he paved, and, as the mixer deposits the mixed paving material upon the subgrade, there to be properly spread by the curing or finishing crew, the mixer, by means of a tractor device with which it is equipped, progressively recedes from the laid pavement and in the direction towards which the work is progressing. The subgrade over which the mixer recedes, or more properly speaking progresses, is, of course, prepared in advance, and the highway commission requires the advance preparation of the subgrade to be in a finished condition, all properly leveled and rolled by a five-ton roller, and with steel forms in accurate and final position twenty feet apart on each side, for at least three hundred feet ahead of the mixer. The batches of material are brought to the mixer by large motor trucks, which back up to the mixer and dump their loads into the receiving scoop of the mixer. Because of the necessary size and length of the trucks, they cannot turn around at the mixer, nor can they back in near the mixer, for this would dislocate the steel forms on the side which at that location must be kept absolutely in true and accurate position.

This necessitates that at an available place ahead of the mixer, and, if possible beyond the three-hundred-foot finished subgrade, there shall be provided a turn in for the trucks, that is to say, a place where the trucks can turn around, back into an opening in the forms, and thus get between the forms and upon the twenty-foot prepared roadway, and thence back down to the mixer, whence, when the load is dumped into the mixer, the trucks proceed driving forward on their then right-hand side of the twenty-foot roadway to the turn in, and.there make their exit. In backing down to the mixer, the truck driver is required to keep his truck on the right-hand side of the road as relates to the direction towards which the truck is then backing, and to see to it that he does not drive *850 against the outside forms which must not be there disturbed, and to constantly blow his horn while backing. This requires that the truck driver constantly look back over his left shoulder and on that side, which, of course, prevents him from seeing what is on the other side. A large fleet of trucks was necessary and that one should back down to the mixer on an average of every minute and a quarter. Eighteen of these trucks were in busy operation on the day in question, and, at the time of the accident, the turn in was about four hundred feet from the mixer.

Appellant’s decedent was the foreman in charge of the subgrade crew working ahead of the mixer and had been engaged in this character of work for three or more years. On the occasion here under review, he had gone down along the roadway between the turn in and the mixer, and, at a point about one hundred fifty feet from the. mixer, he stepped into the twenty-foot roadway and called the attention of a worker there to some, defect in the subgrade to be corrected, and then stepped over just beyond the center of the prepared roadway and into the edge of that space used by the backing trucks. One of the backing trucks had just passed him as he did so, and another was backing down towards the place where the decedent had stopped; and, apparently oblivious of his situation, he was looking towards the mixer when he was struck by the truck last mentioned and was so severely injured that his death soon followed. Other facts will be mentioned later in this opinion, in their pertinent connection. Suit was brought against the contractor to recover for the injury and death, and a peremptory instruction of no liability was granted by the trial court.

It is not claimed that, strictly speaking, the place to work was within itself an unreasonably dangerous place; nor that the machinery and appliances were unsuitable or unsafe, nor that there was any negligence on the part of any servant or foreman of the master. The assertion *851 of liability is placed squarely upon the contention that the system or method of doing the work was unreasonably dangerous, and that the master should have amended his system or method so as to more adequately provide against the danger which produced the injury and death in this case. Appellant says that the master should have furnished or used a turntable for the trucks at the concrete mixer, so that the trucks could always be driven forward, or else a watchman should have been provided whose sole duty it would have been to go in advance of each truck as it backed down to the mixer.

In a recent case, Brown v. Coley, 168 Miss. 778, 152 So. 61, we had occasion to re-examine the question as to when and under what circumstances a master is required to take care to establish a safety system or method of doing the work and to promulgate and enforce rules for the observance of the system or method; and, on the authority of Tatum v. Crabtree, 130 Miss. 462, 94 So. 449, we held that the obligation of the master in that respect applies only when, in addition to being dangerous, the work is complex, and the conditions which may arise are uncertain and obscure. There was no obscurity in the way the work was done here; everything was done in daylight, and every movement made was in the plain and unobstructed view of everybody thereabout; there were no hidden or unknown or nonobvious dangers; nor was there, within a reasonable interpretation of the rule, any uncertainties about the operation. The trucks, blowing their horns, backed down to the mixer at regular intervals of about one and a fourth minutes apart and along a regular track on the right-hand side, looking towards the direction in which the truck was backing, as is required by the general law of the road. It is true that sometimes the trucks would become bunched, so that sometimes the intervals by which they backed would be moré frequent than one and one-quarter minutes and sometimes less frequent; nevertheless, they were to be expected to pass *852 along that definite track at constantly recurring repetitions of very close frequency. There is thus presented a situation similar to that in Olsen v. Northern Pacific Lumber Co., 100 P. 384, 40 C. C. A. 427, cited with approval by our court in Tatum v. Crabtree, supra, and wherein the servant was injured by being struck by a sawmill carriage.

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Bluebook (online)
152 So. 279, 168 Miss. 844, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammontree-v-cobb-const-co-miss-1934.