Harris v. Pounds

187 So. 891, 185 Miss. 688, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 153
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1939
DocketNo. 33575.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 187 So. 891 (Harris v. Pounds) 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
Harris v. Pounds, 187 So. 891, 185 Miss. 688, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 153 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

*693 Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee recovered judgment in an action of tort against appellants on the allegation that appellee and five co-workers, employes of appellants, were ordered by appellants, over the protest of appellee, to carry a hardwood log over rough, uneven and slippery ground, it be *694 ing averred by appellee that tbe log was too heavy to be • safely carried by six men over such ground, and that appellants should have known this on the exercise of reasonable care.

In considering this complaint of appellee, that the log which he and his five fellow workers were required, by concerted action, to carry was too heavy for six men, we are at once confronted with the point made by appellants and with the fact that there is no sufficient evidence in the record of the weight, actual or approximate, of the said burden. How, then, was the jury to say, of their own independent judgment, whether it was too heavy?' The only fact in this record from which a conclusion may be reached as to the weight of the log is its size, to-wit, that it was about 15 feet long and of an average diameter of about 12 inches, and that it was hardwood log, — -but of what species is not shown.

And if it be argued that, because the county in which the case was tried is one abounding in timber growth, jurors from their common observation may estimate the approximate weight from the above data, this would be to say that it is a matter of which common or judicial knowledge may be taken.

It is true that a jury has the right to take into consideration all that knowledge which is common to the average man and springs from the ordinary relations and experiences of life, and in their adjudications may use and apply their own knowledge and observation as regards such ordinary experiences and relations; but their province, in respect to the knowledge of facts which they may thus judicially notice and act upon, without record evidence of the particular facts, is no broader than that of the judge on the bench, who has the power and duty of supervision and review over jury verdicts. 1 Jones, Com. on Evidence (2 Ed.), secs. 471, 472; 5 Wig-more on Evidence (2 Ed.), sec. 2570.

If, then, the weight of a hardwood log of a given size and of a certain species is within the common knowledge *695 of the jury, it is at the same time and as fully a matter of which the presiding judge could take judicial knowledge, and hence of which we here may know judicially, and, therefore, may resort for actual knowledge of it to any such informative source as the court may deem dependable. Witherspoon v. State, 138 Miss. 310, 320, 103 So. 134; Jones v. United States, 137 U. S. 202, 11 S. Ct. 80, 34 L. Ed. 691, 697; 1 Jones, Com. on Evidence (2 Ed.), sec. 469; 7 Ency. Ev., p. 1031.

So doing, we could turn to Scribner’s Lumber and Log Book, a book mentioned in our statutes, section 7358, Code 1930, and there we would find that the approximate weight of a hardwood log of the length and diameter above mentioned is given as 328 pounds for poplar, the lightest, to 538 pounds for beech, the heaviest dealt with therein, and that the average for all species is 438; and looking further to common knowledge, we could with perfect confidence say, and a jury of reasonable and impartial men would be bound to say, that a log weighing 438 pounds or 530 pounds is not too heavy a burden for six workmen of normal strength. This would be only seventy-three pounds or eighty-nine pounds each; and a workman in good health who could not carry that much load has no business in offering to work at all, in such an employment as was involved here. In presenting himself for such work, taking wages therefor, and making no complaint of any physical incapacity, he represents himself as capable of carrying much more than any such a load as 73 pounds or 89 pounds, and he will not be heard to assert otherwise. And we do not overlook the fact that the work was being done on soft and uneven ground.

If, therefore, common knowledge or judicial knowledge could be applied here, we would simply say, without further discussion than the above, that appellee has no maintainable cause of action. But the weight of timber or logs is not a matter of common knowledge, 1 Jones, Com. on Evidence (2 Ed.), sec. 429; 23 C. J., pp. 168-169, *696 sec. 1998; except, of course, the knowledge that it has considerable weight, and that the weight varies according to the species or class of the log' or timber in question. The weight or the approximate weight of a log of a given size and length, and particular species, when, as here, the log is no longer in existence, must be shown by the testimony of a witness or witnesses who have had such special experience in that field as will make their opinion or estimate of distinct value beyond that which might happen to be entertained by a man of no such experience. This is the necessary result of saying that it is not a matter of common knowledge.

Testimony, such as above mentioned, would have been available in this case without any serious difficulty; but none was produced, and no witness gave any estimate of the weight of this log. It was left wholly to the conjecture of, or guess by, the jury, except that appellee and one of his witnesses said that the log was too heavy to be carried by six men. And thus there is sharply presented, and for the first time in these lifting or overloading cases, the question whether the statement of a witness or witnesses that a load was too heavy to safely carry is sufficient in probative force to sustain a verdict, without the weight or the approximate weight of facts of equivalent probative value having been shown in the evidence.

We suppose that if the size of the log had not been given in evidence at all, so that the jury would not have known but that it may have been only six feet long and six inches in diameter, all would admit that the mere assertion, the ipse dixit, of the witness or witnesses that it was too heavy to be carried by six men, would not be a sufficient foundation for a verdict of liability. What of sufficient substance has there been added by the evidence here that the log' was a hardwood log twelve inches in diameter fifteen feet long? This still does not give the weight or the approximate weight of the log; it is not a matter of which the jury may take common or *697 judicial notice; and, as already pointed out, this weight may have been only 438 pounds, according to the average given in the logbook tables.

Whether a burden is too heavy to be carried by six men was for the jury to say upon the basis of evidentiary facts, not for the witness to get in the jurybox and decide that question. What approximately did the log weigh? We repeat that so far as the evidence shows it may have weighed only 438 pounds; and so far as the record discloses the two witnesses who said it was too heavy may have thought that 438 pounds was too heavy for six men, when that decision was one for the jury and not for the witness.

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Bluebook (online)
187 So. 891, 185 Miss. 688, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-pounds-miss-1939.