Interstate Coal Co. v. Shelton

169 S.W. 546, 160 Ky. 40, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 400
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 2, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 169 S.W. 546 (Interstate Coal Co. v. Shelton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interstate Coal Co. v. Shelton, 169 S.W. 546, 160 Ky. 40, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 400 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

[41]*41This action was brought by the appellee, Joe Shelton, administrator of the estate of Lee Hamblin, deceased, to recover' of the appellant, Interstate Coal Company, damages for the death of his intestate; it being alleged in the petition that his death was caused by the negligence of the appellant in failing to provide him, as its employe, with a reasonably safe place in which to perform his work. When killed Hamblin was engaged with other employes of the appellant in making repairs upon its: coal tipple, and while standing upon a platform used in making the repairs and attempting to remove an iron shaft of the tipple in order that it might be replaced by a larger shaft, a plank of the platform upon which he was standing slipped from a girder upon which it rested, causing him to be thrown to a coal car under and twenty or twenty-five feet below the platform, which caused his death. The repairing was done at night and the only light employed was what was furnished by miners’ lamps in the caps of the workmen. Appellant’s foreman, Trosper, was directing the repairs, and when Hamblin and his assistant, Dawson, had the shaft on the platform Hamblin said to Dawson that he would throw it off. Dawson said: “No, it might break it.” Hamblin then replied, no, that was the way that he and Trosper had done before, and to this Trosper, who was in hearing, said nothing. When thrown by Hamblin the shaft came in contact with the end of the plank which it displaced! and thereby caused Hamblin to fall and be killed.

•The answer of appellant denied the negligence complained of and alleged that the death of Hamblin was the result of his own negligence.

There have been two trials of this case in the court below. On the first trial appellee recovered of appellant a verdict and judgment for six thousand dollars damages. On appeal this judgment was reversed for various errors occurring on the trial in the lower court. On the second trial appellee recovered a verdict and judgment against the appellant for six thousand dollars, and the case is again before us for review upon appeal from the last judgment.

The opinion of this court on the first appeal is reported in 152 Ky., 92, and the following excerpts therefrom will so fully present the issues made by the pleadings and evidence and the salient facts connected with [42]*42the accident, as to render a more elaborate statement of them than we have here given unnecessary:

“This suit was brought by his (Hamblin’s) personal representative to recover for his death on the ground that the company was negligent in failing to furnish him a reasonably safe place to work; that the planks in the platform were not nailed, and that the structure was a dangerous -one for the purpose for which it was intended. The proof introduced on the trial conduced strongly to show that Hamblin’s fall was due to the plank on which he was standing, slipping until the end opposite to the place where the shaft was thrown off had slipped off the girder and that this plank was not fastened or secured in any way. There was proof for the defendant that there was a collar on the shaft; also some other attachments, and that there was a scar on the end of the plank, indicating that the shaft as it fell struck the plank, and so caused it to fall. There was also proof for the defendant that the planks constituting the floor of. the platform were securely nailed with large nails six inches long. * * * While it is true that Hamblin would not have been hurt if he had not thrown the shaft off, it is also true that throwing the shaft off would not have caused any trouble if the plank had been securely fastened. Trosper, under whom he was working, had done the work in the same way on a previous occasion, and Trosper, who was in charge of the work, made no objection to Ms suggestion that they should throw the shaft off. It can not be said, therefore, that he was acting outside of the scope of his duty, and the circuit court properly refused the peremptory instruction asked by the defendant. * * * The plaintiff proved by one witness (Buchanan) that he was working on this platform about a week before the accident, and while working there had occasion to move one of the planks of the platform. He could not state definitely which one; and that this plank was not nailed but loose. * * * There was sufficient evidence to take the case to the jury.” * * *

It is insisted for appellant: (1) That appellee failed to prove the negligence charged in the petition, and that appellant was, therefore, entitled to a peremptory instruction; (2) that the injury was caused by the decedent’s own negligence; (3) that the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence; (4) that certain evidence introduced as expert testimony should have been excluded from the consideration of the jury, because the witnesses [43]*43furnishing it were not experts and because the evidence should have been given in chief and not in rebuttal.

The first contention can not prevail. The evidence introduced in appellee’s behalf upon the last trial as to the unsafe and dangerous condition of the platform caused by the presence thereon of the loose or unsecured plank, and the manner in which the decedent met his death, was substantially the same' as was furnished by his witnesses upon the first trial, and the opinion on the former appeal is clear and emphatic in the statement that this evidence was sufficient to take the case to the' jury. Indeed, we may add that the fact that the plank slipped from the girder and caused Hamblin to fall, of itself furnished some evidence that it was not nailed to the platform and was sufficient to take the case to the jury upon the question of appellant’s negligence.

Appellant introduced on the last trial in support of its defense, that the death of Hamblin was caused by his own negligence in throwing the shaft and causing it to strike and loosen the plank that produced his fall, all the witnesses who testified on that subject in its behalf on the first trial, and in addition a new witness, Blaine Parker, who was not present at the first trial. Frank Burch testified for appellant on the last trial, as he did on the first, that five or six weeks before the death of Hamblin he nailed some planks on the tipple platform and thai there were then no loose planks on it, and this statement was again partially corroborated by his brother. Frank also produced on the last trial a plank which he said was the eighth plank in the platform at the time Hamblin was killed. This plank contained in one end a nail by which he claimed it was fastened to the platform when he removed it during the last trial, which was more than two years after Hamblin’s death. Evidently this testimony had no weight with the jury as, according to all the other witnesses, there were not eight planks but only five or six in the platform at the time of Hamblin’s death. And, besides, the nail in the plank produced was not rusty or discolored, as would have been its condition had it been driven in the plank two years before, but a bright new nail and smaller than those all the other witnesses agreed had been used in the platform. If there were eight planks on the platform when Burch brought this plank into court, it is fairly evident that the plank produced had been placed there and the nail driven in it long after Hamblin1» death.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 S.W. 546, 160 Ky. 40, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-coal-co-v-shelton-kyctapp-1914.