Hardaway Contracting Co. v. Rivers

180 So. 800, 181 Miss. 727, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 113
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1938
DocketNo. 33153.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 180 So. 800 (Hardaway Contracting Co. v. Rivers) 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
Hardaway Contracting Co. v. Rivers, 180 So. 800, 181 Miss. 727, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 113 (Mich. 1938).

Opinion

*732 Smith, O'. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee, an employee of the appellant, and two others of its employees, were engaged under the direction of the appellant’s foreman in lifting and moving one end of a wooden mat, which fell and injured the appellee because, as he alleges, of the appellant’s negligence in not furnishing a sufficient number of employees to lift and move the mat. He recovered a judgment against the appellant for the damages he- thereby sustained. The several assignments of error will be disposed of seriatim.

*733 1. After the jury, when being impaneled, had been accepted by the appellee, and tendered to the appellant, its counsel orally requested the court to discharge the jurors impaneled, and grant it a mistrial. The ground of this motion is that, when the jury was tendered to the appellee, his counsel interrogated them at considerable length “as to whether any of them had ever worked for, or been in the employ of, or worked with, any life or casualty insurence company”; which was calculated and intended to bring to the attention of the jury that the appellant held an insurance policy covering its liability to the appellee for the injury received by him. "Whether error appeared in the examination of these jurors is not presented by this motion. That fact could only be made to appear in two ways: first, by a stenographic report of the voir dire examination of the jurors, which this record does not contain, disclosing objections to improper questions, and erroneous and prejudicial rulings thereon; or by a special bill of exceptions, so disclosing.

2, At the close of the evidence the court refused the appellant’s request for a directed verdict. The appellant was engaged in the construction of a state highway, which was being hard surfaced. On the occasion in question the appellee, together with others of the appellant’s employees, was engaged, under the direction of the appellant’s foreman in charge of the work, in “walking” a steam shovel, i. e., moving it along, and on the surface of, the road. The steam shovel was very heavy, and, in order to prevent it from injuring the newly laid surface of the road, it was necessary for it to move over wooden mats. These mats consisted of three 2x12x16 planks, fastened together lengthwise by means of cleats cut crosswise from similar planks. These cleats, according to appellee’s evidence, were so placed as to cause the mat to be of the same weight as if constructed of six planks. These mats were placed in front of the shovel, and, as it progressed, mats over which it had passed were pulled by a tractor from the rear of the steam shovel to the front, *734 and there placed in position crosswise the highway, in front of the shovel, by six employees, three at each end. The method used under the direction of the foreman was for three employees to lift one end of the mat with the other end resting on the ground, shove it a few feet forward, and lower it to the ground, whereupon the same process would be gone through by the three men at the other end of the mat, and so on, until it was properly placed. Prior to the appellee’s injury the mats used were constructed of two oak planks, fastened together with cleats of the same material.

The appellee, when directed by the foreman to assist in moving this mat, remonstrated with him, telling him that the mat was too heavy for three men to lift, to which the foreman made no reply. Each of the other two employees similarly remonstrated, as did another employee then present, but not engaged in moving the mat. To one of them the foreman replied that the mat was not too heavy for three men to move in the manner hereinbefore set forth.

The appellee and his three assistants then lifted the end of the mat, and moved it forward about a foot, when it fell, struck, and seriously injured the appellee’s leg and foot. The reason given by each of these employees for the falling of the mat was that it was too heavy for them to hold. The appellee and his three assistants testified to the weight of the mat, hut stated that they had not weighed it, and were simply giving their estimate as to its weight. Their estimates varied from 800' to 1,600' pounds.

The defendant introduced testimony to the effect that on the morning of the trial of the case a mat that had been used by the appellant in “walking” its shovels, consisting of two oak planks 2x10x16, fastened together with cleats of the same material,'between which cleats there were spaces, sometimes as much as four inches, was weighed, and that ' its weight was 410 pounds, from *735 which the appellant axgnes that a three-plank mat of the same material “could not have weighed more than 615 pounds.”

The appellant claims that it was entitled to a directed verdict on two grounds: (1) That the appellant’s evidence as to the actual weight of the mat controls the estimates thereof-by the appellee’s witnesses; and that directing three men to lift and move one end of a mat weighing 615 pounds presents no evidence of negligence; but, if mistaken in this, (2) the evidence discloses “that the appellee was doing that which he knew he could not do, and .that he acted voluntarily and without coercion on the part of the appellant. '. . . This fact in itself conclusively shows that it was the negligence of the appellee in voluntarily doing that which he knew he could not do that was the proximate cause of the injury, and in no wise the negligence of the appellant.” The appellant further says that, by voluntarily assisting in the attempt to lift and move the mat which he knew was too heavy for three men to lift, the appellee assumed the risk of the negligence, if any, of the appellant in failing to furnish a sufficient number of men to lift and move the mat.

Estimates of weights and measures will yield to actual weights and measures when such are established. Kress & Co. v. Sharp, 156 Miss. 693, 126 So. 650, 68 A. L. R. 167. But such is not here the case. The mat here weighed was not the one in question, but differed materially therefrom, not only in the size of the planks composing it, which were 2x10x16, instead of 2x12x16, and also in the number of cleats by which they were fastened together. On the whole evidence it was for the jury to say whether the mat was too heavy for the three men to lift.

The common-law rule that a servant assumes the risk incident to the negligence of his master, of which he has knowledge, was abolished as to most railroad employees by section 193 of the State Constitution, and as'to all employees “except as to conductors,' or locomotive engineers, in charge of dangerous or unsafe cars or engines *736 voluntarily operated by them,” by section 513, Code 1930. That the appellee may not have been coerced into assisting in lifting the mat, but voluntarily did so, is of no consequence, for the statute itself contains the only exception in this respect which it permits, and it must be enforced as written.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Smith v. Commercial Trucking Co.
742 So. 2d 1082 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1999)
Johnson v. Ferguson
435 So. 2d 1191 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1983)
Gulf Insurance Company v. Provine
321 So. 2d 311 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1975)
New Orleans & Northeastern Railroad v. Burney
159 So. 2d 85 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1963)
Buford v. O'Neal
128 So. 2d 553 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1961)
Russell v. Mississippi Central Railroad
125 So. 2d 283 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1960)
Mayfield Motor Co., Inc. v. Parker
75 So. 2d 435 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1954)
Oakes v. Mohon
44 So. 2d 551 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1950)
Blue Bell Globe Mfg. Co. v. Lewis
27 So. 2d 900 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1946)
Pittman v. Schultz
125 F.2d 82 (Fifth Circuit, 1942)
Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Lindsey
104 F.2d 882 (Fifth Circuit, 1939)
Harris v. Pounds
187 So. 891 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1939)
Aponaug Mfg. Co. v. Carroll
184 So. 63 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 So. 800, 181 Miss. 727, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardaway-contracting-co-v-rivers-miss-1938.