Joy v. Pope

53 P.2d 683, 175 Okla. 540
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 21, 1936
DocketNo. 26221.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 53 P.2d 683 (Joy v. Pope) 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
Joy v. Pope, 53 P.2d 683, 175 Okla. 540 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This is an appeal from the district court of Grady county, Okla., wherein the plaintiff recovered judgment against defendant on the 23rd day of October, 1934, for the sum of $2,000. S'aid judgment was rendered upon the verdict of the jury signed by eleven jurors. To reverse the judgment, the defendant brings this appeal. We will refer to the parties in this case as they appeared in the trial court.

The plaintiff is widow of Frank Pope, and prosecuted this action in her own behalf and on behalf of the three minor children of Frank Pope. The action was based upon the negligence of the defendant, the result of which it was claimed caused the death of Frank Pope on or about the 24th day of October, 1933, while the said Frank Pope was performing his duties in the employ of defendant.

Defendant operated the Chickasha Compress at Chickasha, Okla., and Frank Pope was employed at the time of his death as a band shover at said compress. The operation of the compress machinery is quite complicated; for the purpose of a general ^outline as to how the compress operated, with particular reference to Frank Pope’s work, we will quote a part of the plaintiff’s petition, with some changes and omissions, however, which we make therein, to wit:

‘'In compressing of baled cotton, such machinery so being used, being substantially as follows:
“A large stationary iron or steel block substantially supported by large iron beams, said block being about 60 inches long and 24 inches wide, and being about six feet above the surface of the platforms located on each side thereof. Below such large block is an iron follow block of the same size, and located about two inches below the platform on each side thereof, which moves up and down in the process of compressing-such cotton, such follow block being controlled by steam. On each side of such follow block platform, doors about six feet wide and about eight feet long are attached to hinges, and which platform doors raise with the follow block, and by the same power which operates the follow block; under the platform doors are steel doors about the same size, which are attached to hinges on each side of the follow block, and are operated at the same time the follow block and the platform doors are operated, and by the same power. That as such platform doors raise, the end nearest the follow block rises, and the steel doors rise from the opposite end. On each side of the platform doors, there is a small platform about six feet long and eighteen inches in width and being level with the surface of the top of such platform doors. The doors and follow block are operated by an engineer, who sits in a cab immediately east of the, east end of the follow block, 'and about eight or ten feet from the east end thereof. * * *
‘-‘The operation necessary to compress baled cotton, by the use of such machinery above described, is as follows: The bale of cotton is placed on the small press, called a dinky press. From the bale so placed in such press, the ties are removed, and for the purpose of preventing the bagging from becoming loose, small steel or wire hooks about 24 Inches long are fastened in the bagging, near the ends of the bale. The bale is then trucked on to such platform door and dumped upon the follow bock in position to be compressed. Before the power is applied for compression of the cotton, the employee stationed on the small platform immediately east of the door, is required to remove the steel hooks from the bale, and in doing so, such employee is forced to step from the small platform onto the platform door and remove such hooks and step back on the small platform before the machinery which operates the doors and follow block ’is started.”

The decedent, Frank Pope,, was engaged in his duties as a band shover, with which band or bands the compressed bale of cotton was tied into a smaller bale. Thera were also other servants around the machinery among whom was one known as the head sewer, whose duty it is to get the bagging around the bale in position and sew it. Wg here quote from defendant’s opening statement to the jury as further explanation of the operation:

‘‘Mr. Hatcher; Now, then, Mr. Melton Is right when he says there is a dinky press right out here. The evidence will show when these cotton bales come from the gin, you put them in this dinky press, press them out to fake the ties off. They undo the ties and pull all of them off of it and then, if they are using short bagging it is necessary *542 to use a couple of hooks, about that long. They are common, .ordinary wire hooks, probably about the size of a pencil. * * * We will have some of those hooks, * * * with just a little hook on the end of them, and they put those hooks in the bagging, where the bagging is short, just merely to hold the bale together until a man can take k wheelbarrow and bring it here and push it in * * * the ‘press feeder’ they call him.
“Well, the press feeder takes that right on in there. Mr. Melton is right when he says there is three band shovers on this side and there is three tiers on the other side. One of those band shovers works right there (indicating on model) and one there, and one stood in the middle between; each one shoves through three bunds — there are nine hands on one of these compressed bales of cotton.
“Now, before they can shove those through someone has to push them through to them and three men on the other side are the ones that do the tying. The tyers push through to the baud shovers and the tyers — this platform on this side and the platform on the other side 'always work together — they come up and go down at the same time. When this .man over here, this press feeder, brings his bale of cotton and he starts on there, with a bale of cotton, on a little hand truck, one of these little hand dump trucks, kind of like a wheelbarrow, he comes in there with a bale of cotton — now, I think the evidence is going to show that if there is a hook on the hind side of this bale of cotton, as it comes in on that side., it would be on .this side (indicating) when the bale was straightened up — if there is a hook there, this band shover here, it is his duty to walk in there with this man as he takes the bale in, and as this bale dumps out, it he can take the hook off with one hand there, his left hand if he cun just take it off and step back over there (indicating) be dees it. If he cannot get it, if for some reason it does not come loose, it Is just a hook, why let it alone, and that the head tier out here will either get it or anybody can get it. and it wouldn’t make any difference whether anybody got it or not — there is dozens of them nobody gets and they just drop down under there (indicating) or hang on, nothing can be hurt, It is just a piece of wire.”

The defendant denied generally and specifically the allegation of negligence of plaintiff’s petition and pleaded contributory negligence and assumption of risk on the part of Frank Pope.

Defendant has appealed and assigned as error that no primary negligence of defendant was shown and that there was therefore nothing to submit to the jury. Also, that certain instructions were improper.

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Bluebook (online)
53 P.2d 683, 175 Okla. 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joy-v-pope-okla-1936.