Harriss-Irby Cotton Co. v. Duncan

1915 OK 1108, 157 P. 746, 57 Okla. 761, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 589
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 21, 1915
Docket4873
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1915 OK 1108 (Harriss-Irby Cotton Co. v. Duncan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harriss-Irby Cotton Co. v. Duncan, 1915 OK 1108, 157 P. 746, 57 Okla. 761, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 589 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion by

McKEOWN, C.

The plaintiff, Will Duncan, by his next friend, L,- A. Wiseman, commenced this action .in the superior court of Oklahoma county against the plaintiff in error, Harriss-Irby Cotton Company, to recover damages for injuries sustained to his right hand in a gin owned and operated by the plaintiff in error, located at Geary, Okla. The cause was tried to a jury upon the issues as joined, and upon a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff the defendant appealed to this court. The parties will be referred to in the opinion as plaintiff and defendant as they appeared in the court below.

There was evidence to show that the plaintiff was a boy 16 years of age at the time of his injuries, on the 29th day of January, 1912, and that for tpn days prior thereto he had been employed to run the gin stand upon which he was injured. For four or five months prior to the time *763 he was put in charge of the gin stand he had been employed by the defendant to work at the press, which was located near the gin stand. The gin at which he was at work at the time of the injury was a 70-saw Pratt double breast gin. It was disclosed that L. A. Wiseman, the next friend and brother-in-law of the plaintiff, had been employed by the defendant to go in company with its mechanic, Hughes, to this gin plant at Geary to put the same in good condition' prior to the time the season opened in September. The mechanism employed to stop the gins when in motion was what was denominated as an' “idler pulley,” which, when pushed in proper position, would stop the gin stand from running. It appears that the idler in use at the gin stand where plaintiff was injured was ineffective to stop the gin, on account of the bent being too short, and had been, in this condition since the cotton season had opened.some five months prior thereto; that a short distance from the gin stand was a rope attached to a whistle with which to notify the engineer ■ to stop the machinery. When the whistle was blown the engineer would stop all of the gin stands, and because of this the ginners in charge of the gin stands would rarely blow this whistle when wanting to stop one stand alone. It appears that at the time the plaintiff was injured he was attempting to pull some cotton loose from under the breast of the gin, and while doing so his hand was caught in the saws of the gin and seriously injured. No instructions of warning had been given him as to the danger of loosening cotton that had clogged in such a manner. The plaintiff testified that he had observed his brother-in-law clean the gins, but had never seen him pull the whistle so the engine would stop the machinery in order to clean the gin. There was evidence that the plain *764 tiff was reared in Texas, and that for more than a year prior to the injury had been away from his father, working and earning his wages for himself; that his mother was dead, and he left home on account of his stepmother, and came to L. A. Wiseman’s, his brother-in-law and next friend, to live; that some time after he came he received a letter from his father (which had been lost at the time of the trial), telling him that, as he was away from home, he would have to do for himself the best he could, and that after his injury he wrote his father, but never received any reply.

The issues tendered by the pleadings were: First, that the negligence of the defendant which directly caused the plaintiff’s injury was its failure to furnish belt shafts or other mechanical contrivances reasonably suitable, sufficient, or effective to stop the machinery of the gin whenever it was practicable to do so without affecting the efficient use of the machinery, in that on the particular gin stand upon which the plaintiff was at work when he was injured the belt was too short, and when the “idler” was raised it failed to stop the gin as it was intended to do, and that such condition had existed some four or five months prior to the time of the injury; second, that the defendant failed to warn and instruct the plaintiff as to the dangers incident to the work he was engaged in at the time of his injury — to which the defendant answered by way of a general denial and pleaded assumption of risk and contributory negligence as affirmative defenses.

The defendant first complains of the action of the trial court in refusing to permit one of its witnesses, named Whittington, to testify to certain statements made by Wiseman, the brother-in-law and next friend of the *765 plaintiff, in the absence of the plaintiff, and insists that said testimony was competent upon the ground: First, for the purpose of impeaching the witness Wiseman; and, second, for the purpose of showing what amount of instructions an ordinarily prudent man would have given the plaintiff. The witness Wiseman was asked on cross-examination :

“Q. I will ask you to state if it is not a fact that in Geary last January, before the plaintiff was put to work as ginner, you made an application to Mr. Whittington on one or more occasions to put the plaintiff to work as such ginner? A. I did not. Q. Is it not a fact that in Geary in last January, on one or more occasions, before plaintiff was put to work as a ginner, that you discussed with Mr. Whittington plaintiff’s qualifications for filling the position of ginner? A. I told Mr. Whittington, in Geary, that I thought he would make a good ginner. Q, Is it not a fact last January at Geary, the question of getting another ginner came up; that Mr. Whittingon told you he wanted to get a man down from Watonga? A. Yes, sir; he asked me about getting a man from Watonga. Q. Did you not then get angry and tell him that if the man came, he would have to hunt a man to run the engine? A. No, sir. Q. You made no such statement at all? A. No, sir.”

In its regular turn the defendant called the witness Whittington, and propounded to him the following question :

“Q. I will ask you to state whether or not when you mentioned the matter to Mr. Wiseman that you could bring a ginner down from Watonga to take his place what did he say?”

The objection of the plaintiff to the question was sustained.

*766 “The defendant here offers to prove by this witness that on one of the occasions in January, 1912, when Mr. Wiseman was discussing the question with him as to who should take Wiseman’s place as ginner, and while Wise-man was insisting that plaintiff should be employed to take Wiseman’s place as ginner, the witness stated_ to Wiseman that defendant had a ginner at Watonga who was.on the pay roll of defendant, and was not then being used in running the gin at Watonga on account of its being closed down, and that Wiseman got angry with witness for proposing to bring down the ginner from Watonga, and stated if he did bring him down, that he should only be an assistant to Will Duncan, the plaintiff, Wiseman stating again at that time that Will Duncan was thoroughly competent to run the gins of defendant at Geary, the plaintiff not being present.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 1108, 157 P. 746, 57 Okla. 761, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harriss-irby-cotton-co-v-duncan-okla-1915.