Hatfield v. White Line Motor Freight Co.

272 N.W. 99, 223 Iowa 7
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 9, 1937
DocketNo. 43714.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 272 N.W. 99 (Hatfield v. White Line Motor Freight Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hatfield v. White Line Motor Freight Co., 272 N.W. 99, 223 Iowa 7 (iowa 1937).

Opinion

Parsons, J.

In 1935 the W. B. Ewer Construction Company erected an office building for the Maytag Company in the city of Newton, Iowa. This building stood on the north side of an east and west street. It is faced with stone. The building was erected and the roof put on by September, 1935. There ■were three foremen on the job, all employees of the construction company. Paul H. Hatfield was foreman of the stone and brick work. The street upon which the building faced was 54 feet wide, from the office building on the north side of the street to the Maytag factory on the south side of the street. The condi *8 tion of the street, as it existed on April 9, 1936, is shown by various photographs, Exhibits A, B, and C. In the process of erecting the building and placing the stone on the front thereof, which was the south side of the building, a derrick was mounted ■on the roof of the new building, .with three ropes running from the top of the pole in different directions, to hold it in place and to steady it while stone was being lifted into place. Along the street, on the north side of the factory building, ran a railway switch track for car loadings, and at the end of the track was a bumper to which one of these guy ropes was sometimes fastened. This railroad ran along the factory building and was enclosed by a woven wire fence, which also enclosed the bumper. This track and fence took up a part of the street between the office building and the factory, so that the width of that portion of the street left open to the public was about 33 feet, from the north side of the fence to the office building.

The derrick mounted on the roof of the office building consisted of a pole mounted on a framework, with three ropes from the top of the pole, running in different directions to hold and steady the pole. Two of these ropes were fastened in the back of the building, and the third rope was stretched across the street and fastened to the fence, or to the bumper at times, and sometimes it did not stretch across the street, but was fastened down in front of the building near the mixer. The derrick was movable back and forth, and was approximately twelve feet high, the pole being a 6x6. Besides the poles and ropes there was a winch with a cable with which the stone was hoisted. The framework of the derrick is composed of a piece of timber four feet long and six inches wide with rollers on it, and on top of this is placed the pole, straight up. On top of the pole was a ring for the ropes to be tied to, two guy ropes being fastened back on 'the building, and one in front. The winch is a crank with two handles, one on each side, operated by two men generally. The rope that was sometimes stretched across the street is called a tag line, and its use was to keep the derrick from falling backward; the other two ropes to keep it from falling forward. When drawing up stone the pole will give at least a little, and that would cause the tag line to slacken or sag.

On the afternoon of September 3, 1935, in the construction of the office building, it became necessary, or advisable, to raise from the street quite a large stone to be put in place in the front *9 wall. Hatfield had charge of this part of the work, directing just how it should be done, and under his direction the tag line was fastened to the bumper at the end of the switch track, thus crossing the street diagonally from the north side to the south side. Assisting Hatfield was a man by the name of Harthorn, and one Boley. Boley was winding up the winch, to raise the stone, Hatfield and Harthorn were holding down the other two ropes, which were anchored to steel beams which came up above the roof, each rope tied in a hook in the end of the beam, and tied so as the knot would not slip. The ropes ordinarily would be tightened up good so the derrick would be straight; it was customary to so fasten them tightly. But this day Hatfield and Harthorn were holding down the ropes. Harthorn said in his testimony, “I had never known of it being done by a man sitting down on the rope, and holding it down as it was done that day”, and added that Hatfield said, “This is our last stone and we will hold it down instead of tightening it up.” Near Hatfield was an elevator shaft, west and a little north of where he was working. He was near the elevator shaft so he could call to the men on the lower floor to tell them what to do in sétting the stone. Boley was drawing up the stone.

The photographs, Exhibits A, B and C did not show the condition of the street as it existed September 3, 1935. Exhibit 1 is a photograph showing the condition of the street on September 3, 1935.

The street was open to travel, at least trucks were passing through there quite frequently to the factory building on the south side of the street, probably loading and unloading. On September 3, 1935, a truck of the defendant, of the trailer type, came along the street and struck the guy rope stretched across the street, and the ropes which Hatfield and Harthorn were holding down on top of the building were suddenly jerked from under the men, throwing Harthorn about six feet away, and throwing Hatfield into the elevator shaft, where he fell to his death.

The plaintiff in this case is the widow of Hatfield and the administratrix of his estate, and she brings this suit to recover damages occasioned by his death. In her petition she sets up that the plaintiff, Nettie M. Hatfield, was the administratrix of the estate of Paul H. Hatfield, deceased, and alleged the employment of Hatfield by the W. B. Ewer Construction Company in building the two-story office building for the Maytag factory *10 at Newton, Iowa, and that the deceased was a foreman of the construction company, working on the roof of said building, assisting in placing the stone, which at that time was being lowered by the derrick mounted on the roof of the building, and that one of the ropes by which the derrick was held in place, extended from the top of the derrick, some ten feet above the building, in a southeasterly direction across the pavement, to the south side thereof, where the same had been made fast several feet above the ground. That Ferd Brunk, a driver for the defendant, operating a truck for it, in a careless and negligent manner, ran into the rope causing the derrick to be disturbed in such way that it hurled her husband to the ground and killed him. The petition alleged six grounds of negligence, as follows:

1. That said defendant was negligent in failing to keep a lookout for said tie rope.

2. That said defendant was negligent in attempting to drive said truck under said tie rope, and too close to the lower end thereof to permit clearing the same.

3. That said defendant was negligent in failing to avoid contact between said truck and said tie rope.

4. That said defendant was negligent in driving said truck into and against said tie rope.

5. That said defendant was negligent in failing to stop said truck immediately upon the same coming in contact with or striking said tie rope.

6. That said defendant was negligent in continuing to drive said truck ahead after striking said tie rope and until said derrick had been pulled down and plaintiff’s intestate had been thrown from 'the top of said two-story building and hurled to the ground.

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Bluebook (online)
272 N.W. 99, 223 Iowa 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatfield-v-white-line-motor-freight-co-iowa-1937.