John Bouchard & Sons Co. v. Keaton

9 Tenn. App. 467, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 252
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 21, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 9 Tenn. App. 467 (John Bouchard & Sons Co. v. Keaton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Bouchard & Sons Co. v. Keaton, 9 Tenn. App. 467, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 252 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

The defendant below, John Bouchard & Sons Company, a corporation, brought this case to this court by an appeal in error from a judgment against it for $1000 in favor of the plaintiff below, L. R. Keaton, but, as a matter of convenience, we will refer to L. R. Keaton as plaintiff and John Bouchard & Sons Company as defendant.

Shortly after the noon hour on August 31, 1927, while plaintiff was engaged in digging a post-hole at the foot of a concrete pier of the Jefferson Street bridge, near the bank of the Cumberland River, in the City of Nashville, a short bar of iron, about eight inches in length and weighing about seventeen pounds, fell or was thrown or dropped from the top of the pier and struck plaintiff, fracturing his left shoulder blade and three ribs. The distance from the top of the pier to the ground was twenty-seven feet and plaintiff was on the ground immediately at the foot of the pier. Four employees of defendant were on top of the pier, where they were engaged in riveting steel "channel irons” as a part of the construction of an extension to a sand and gravel conveyor which defendant was building pursuant to a contract with the River Products Company or C. M. Hughes & Company, and the iron bar, known as a "bucking bar,” which struck plaintiff, was one of the tools in *469 possession of defendant’s employees on tpp of the pier as aforesaid, but which, according to the proof, was not in actual use by them at the time plaintiff was injured.

Plaintiff Keaton was employed by the River Products Company or C. M. Hughes & Company as a carpenter and laborer and was working under the direction of D. C. Teal, foreman in the employ of C. M. Hughes & Company or River Products Company.

(C. M. Hughes & Company and River Products Company were separate entities, but they were closely allied in some way not clearly defined in the record, and, for the purposes of this case, they may be treated as identical. It is immaterial to the issues in this case whether C. M. Hughes & Company or River Products Company employed plaintiff, and it is also immaterial whether defendant contracted with C. M. Hughes & Company or River Products Company to build the extension to the sand and gravel conveyor. We will, therefore, treat C. M. Hughes & Company and River Products Company as one arid the same).

Plaintiff was not a fellow-servant of the four workmen engaged in riveting steel on top of the pier, as plaintiff was an employee of River Products Company, and the said four steel workers were employees of the defendant, an independent contractor.

The case went to trial before a jury in the circuit court on the issues made by defendant’s plea of not guilty to plaintiff’s declaration, and, at the close of all the evidence, the defendant moved the court to direct the jury to return a verdict in its favor on four grounds specified in the motion. In this court defendant has assigned errors upon the action of the trial court in overruling its aforesaid motion for peremptory instruction, but has confined its assignments to the second, third and fourth grounds of the motion, which are as follows:

"Second: Because the testimony all shows that the plaintiff assumed the risk and the dangers incident to the performance of the work he was doing, and he well knew all about those dangers.
Third: Because the evidence shows that the relationship that the defendant occupied was that of an independent contractor— that the employees were under the supervision and control of C. M. Hughes & Company and they weren’t subject to the orders of the defendant.
Fourth: Because there is no evidence whatever introduced showing any actionable negligence on the part of the defendant, but on the contrary, all of the evidence by which it is sought to hold the defendant liable by reason of this piece of iron falling or being thrown, as the declaration alleged, is purely conjecture, and to allow the jury to pass upon that would simply *470 be giving the jury the license and the right to guess upon the qixestion of liability. In other words, the proof all shows two or more known causes could have caused the dislodging and falling of this piece-of iron.”

Passing for the present the “second” ground of the motion, supra: there is an abundance of evidence from which the jury could find that defendant was engaged in the work its employees were doing in the construction of the sand and gravel conveyor as an independent contractor; that is to say, defendant had contracted with the River Products Company to do certain specified construction work as a part of the extension of said conveyor, and, although the construction when complete was to conform to certain agreed specifications, the defendant had the right to do the work according to its own methods and without being subject to control of its employer, the River Products Company, except as to the result of the work. Fleming, Kirkpatrick, Sandefur and Long— the four men engaged in steel construction and at work on top of the pier when plaintiff was injured — were employed and paid by defendant, and no one but defendant had the right to discharge them or to direct and control them as to the method and manner in which they should conduct their work in the performance of the contract. In other words, at the time plaintiff was injured the four workmen above named were servants of the defendant, and as such were engaged within the scope of their employment, and the plaintiff was the servant of a different master, viz.: the River Products Company.

We have thus defined the status of the parties to this suit and the persons whose conduct is here under investigation in connection with the calamity which befell the plaintiff, for the reason that the rule of res ipsa loquitur and the doctrine of assumed risk enter into the consideration of the case.

The manner in which the “bucking bar” which struck and injured plaintiff was used by defendant’s employees. appears from the testimony of W. IT. Fleming, one of defendant’s employees and a witness for plaintiff, from whose testimony we quote as follows:

“Q. This is Mr. Wendell Fleming? A. Yes sir.
“Q. You are employed now, Mr. Fleming, by John Bouchard & Sons? A. Yes sir.
“Q. Working for them now every day? A. Well, not every day. I work most of the time.
“Q. How-long have you been in his employ? A. Ever since June, about some time in June, I don’t remember the date.
“Q. June of last year? A. Yes sir.
“Q. You were working for him in August of last year on this job out here on Jefferson Street? A. Yes, sir.
*471 “Q. Doing the steel work? A. Yes sir.
“Q. Who was your foreman? A. Mr. Bouchard.
“Q. Your employer? A. Yes'sir.
££Q. You all were doing nothing but the steel work? A. That is all, the steel work.
££Q. Putting■ steel on that conveyor? .A.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Tenn. App. 467, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-bouchard-sons-co-v-keaton-tennctapp-1928.