Hollenback v. Hand

189 F. 929, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5322
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York
DecidedOctober 11, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 189 F. 929 (Hollenback v. Hand) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hollenback v. Hand, 189 F. 929, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5322 (circtndny 1911).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge.

The Washington' & Berkeley Bridge Company, a West Virginia corporation, as owner, undertook the construction of a bridge across the Potomac river near AVilliamsport, Md. The piers were to be of concrete from 20 to 40 or more feet in height and were designed to carry a steel superstructure of great weight and during construction heavy machineiy for placing it and cars after construction. It was, of course, necessary that these piers should be strong and well constructed of suitable material well and thoroughly mixed and placed properly and left to harden or set at least a.suitable time before placing a load thereon. The defendant company owed a duty to all who should go upon the piers while placing the superstructure to do its work properly and efficiently in all respects, and, if it knew the materials furnished for the construction of such piers were unsuitable and made a weak and dangerous struc[931]*931ture, to notify the Pennsylvania Steel Company and its employes of the defects and danger. To this end, so far as construction was concerned, there were plans and specifications; but no time was fixed within which a load should not be placed thereon after completion, and nothing was said in the specifications as to the time the forms should be left on the various sections of a pier as the work of construction progressed. As matter of fact, after some of the piers were completed, the work of placing the steel superstructure was commenced and carried forward, so that it was placed or being placed on pier No. 10, counting from the Maryland side of the river, some seven days after this pier was completed. The weather at this time, December 16, 1908, was quite cold and damp, and there was evidence that such weather as this would delay the setting and hardening of the concrete material. The owner, Washington & Berkeley Bridge Company, let the contract for erecting the piers to the defendant company, the Elmore & Hamilton Contracting Company, and let the contract for erecting the steel superstructure thereon to the Pennsylvania Steel Compány. As, after a little time, both companies were working on this bridge at the same time, each could see what the other was doing and how the work was being done and the materials used. There was an engineer in charge of the entire work for the owner, and each contracting company had a foreman or superintendent. Jeremiah Hollenback was in the employ of the Pennsylvania Steel Company and engaged with others in placing the superstructure. There was no contractual relation between the defendant company and the steel company, nor was there any such relation between the deceased and the defendant company. However, the defendant company owed the duty before mentioned to Hollenback.

On the morning of December 16, 1908, while Hollenback, with other employés of the Pennsylvania Steel Company, was engaged in placing the iron beams extending from pier 9 to pier 10, on pier 10, and after same had been partially placed, the top portion of pier 10 gave way, that is, the girder or beam placed thereon on the upstream side cut or sheared right down through the upper part of the concrete pier and the girder, crane, traveler, and other ironwork with the men thereon, including Hollenback, the deceased, were precipitated to the bed of the stream some 40 feet below, and Hollenback received injuries from which he died.

The contention of the plaintiff was and is that the concrete was of improper material, improperly mixed, and weak and rotten owing to the negligence of the defendant company in using same and in constructing such pier, and that its negligence was such as to charge it with notice of such weakness, and that it turned this pier over or allowed same to pass to the hands of the Pennsylvania Steel Company for the uses and purposes intended knowing of such weakness, improper construction, etc., or legally charged with notice thereof, without notice to that company, and hence was and is responsible for the consequences that followed. The contention of the defendant was and is that the concrete was all right, composed of suitable material, properly mixed and placed, but that the weather conditions were [932]*932such that the Pennsylvania Steel Company went upon such pier and placed the load thereon before the concrete had had time suitabty to set and harden, and that the pier gave way because of this premature use; the defendant company being free from all fault and negligence on its part. There was evidence of some haste in the completion of this pier No. 10, and that the concrete for the part that gave way was mixed by hand instead of with machinery or a mixer, as the material used up to that time for the construction of the piers had been. Evidence was allowed under objection and exception that, after pier 10 gave way, the pier was in May, June, or July following, as to this top portion, reconstructed by the owner, Berkeley Company, of the same kind of sand, or sand from the same bank in the river, same crushed stone, that is, crushed stone of the same character from the same quarry and crushed in the same way, same kind of cement, all mixed into concrete in substantially the same way and allowed to stand some three to five weeks before use, and that the load, steel superstructure, etc., was then placed thereon, and that the pier carried the load without giving way. The steel superstructure was being placed by the Pennsylvania Steel Company when the accident happened, and that company placed it after the pier had been reconstructed in the early summer following. This evidence was offered and allowed for the purpose of showing that the sand, stone, and cement used were proper, suitable, and sufficient as to quality for the purpose, and that there was no negligence in using it, but it was not specifically limited to that purpose. There was evidence that the sand used was not such as the contract called for — that is, “clean, sharp, coarse sand” — as it was taken from the banks of the Potomac river at low water and was sand that had been washed down and left by the flow of the river at high water, and that it contained some leaves, sticks, etc. There was evidence that this tended to weaken the concrete. There was evidence also to the contrary. There was also evidence that the mixing of concrete by hand sometimes results in less uniformity and may produce a weaker concrete, a crumbling material, depending of course on the uniformity and thoroughness of the hand mixing. There was evidence pro and con as to the weakness of concrete made of sand containing a small percentage of loam. There was also evidence tending to show that on the 16th, the day the pier gave way, the top portion was green, looked wet, and was not suitabty set or hardened, and that this could be • seen from the ground.

It is undoubtedly true that this concrete was not first class, or such as would have been produced by using sand such as was called for by the strict terms of the contract; but there was evidence that it was tested, accepted, and used,- all the contracting parties concurring in its use. Whether or not the concrete used in completing pier 10 before the accident was properly and sufficiently mixed was a disputed question. The evidence was not clear that the concrete used to repair and restore the top of pier 10 after the accident was mixed in the same manner as was that used in its completion prior to the accident. However, the fact that this stone, sand, gravel, and cement [933]

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Bluebook (online)
189 F. 929, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hollenback-v-hand-circtndny-1911.