Joyce v. Union Garbide & Carbon Corp.

173 N.E.2d 692, 114 Ohio App. 51
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 30, 1961
Docket25431
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 173 N.E.2d 692 (Joyce v. Union Garbide & Carbon Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joyce v. Union Garbide & Carbon Corp., 173 N.E.2d 692, 114 Ohio App. 51 (Ohio Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

Hubd, J.

This is an appeal by plaintiff, appellant herein, from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County ¿ntered upon a directed verdict in favor of defendant, appellée herein, at the close of plaintiff’s case. For brevity, the parties will be designated as plaintiff and defendant as they appeared in the trial court.

The action is for damages for personal injuries in the nature of. body burns suffered by the plaintiff, a steam fitter, while on the premises of the defendant, the plaintiff being in the employ of the B. F. Shaw Company, an independent contractor, engaged by defendant to install prefabricated cast-iron pipes and fittings on three tanks which were located at the south end of boiler No. 4 in the power plant of the Electro-Metallurgical Company Division of the defendant, located in Ashtabula, Ohio.

The record shows that the plaintiff’s work brought him into close proximity to the boilers which were in operation in the defendant’s plant, and, at the time of the accident and resulting injuries complained of and for a period prior thereto, he had been working in an area close to boiler No. 4, the scene of the accident. Neither the plaintiff nor the independent contractor, for whom he worked on the premises, had any duty of any kind in connection with the boiler operation. The boiler had a door opening, the center line of which was in the center of the south side of the boiler about five feet and five inches above the floor on which the plaintiff was working. The opening was approximately 18 inches in diameter and had an iron door cover about three-fourths of an inch thick and 22 or 23 inches in diameter. This door cover was hinged on the east side and could be securely shut by three equidistant heavy two-inch-thick “dogs” or lugs which swiveled onto the cover. These lugs weighed about one to two pounds each and were shaped like an arm on a swivel and were constructed of solid metal. The plaintiff testified that the lugs “had to be pretty fair size because a man has to grab a handle with his fist * ® * and give it a spin and pull it down. It is on the inside of the arm and is a graduated slope, it just starts and gets thicker and it pushes the door in, the whole *53 three of them. It íb a sure look, it is a dog, they call it, a door Ipck.” At the time of the injury, the plaintiff had just returned from lunch with his fellow worker and both were examining fittings and valves located on the floor close to the boiler “trying to figure” if they had made a mistake in some of the fittings in connection with their work. They studied their blueprints but could not find where they had “left out any elbow or tee or anything real serious.” At this particular time, there was an employee of the defendant peering into the boiler bottom through the door. The door was open and defendant’s employee had a long bar which he thrust into and pulled out of the boiler about six or seven times. The record indicates that he engaged in this operation about four times while the plaintiff was close to the area, the door being open for from 35 to 40 minutes. The purpose of defendant’s employee’s action was to dissolve a sludge accumulation in the boiler. He would then drop the bar and would run around to the east side of the boiler where there was a funnel sight glass through which it was possible to see the action within the boiler. There were no markings on the floor to indicate where plaintiff should or should not work or signs on the walls with any warnings to indicate danger. While plaintiff was working within this vicinity, after he had returned from lunch, an employee of the defendant, by the name of Dewey, was conducting the operation of thrusting the iron bar into the boiler to remove sludge in the manner described. The defendant’s employee left the door open while he ran around to the vicinity of the sight glass located on the east side of the boiler. It was on one of these occasions when the door was left open—the employee being at the other side of the boiler—that suddenly, without any warning of any kind, there erupted from the open door of the boiler white hot molten ashes which struck the plaintiff in the face, the neck, both sides of the chest and arms, causing him to stagger, reel and fall down screaming due to severe pains inflicted by the hot ashes. While the plaintiff was still on the floor, immediately after the occurrence, defendant’s employee eame around, closed the door with the lugs and then went back in the same direction in which he had come without attempting to help plaintiff in any way. The plaintiff tried to get up, fell down again, reeled back and grabbed hold of the top corner of the rectangular tank. During *54 all ■ this: time he was, to quote him,hollering and trying to get the ashes- off the back of my neck and head—trying to lift my shirt up—felt as though I was on fire—from this point I crawled along (indicating on a map) hanging on to the top of the rectangular tank, trying to get the ashes off my neck and-face,” etc. He received some help from his coworker, Snyder, -who then went to tell the steward and foreman. Thereafter, the’ shop steward, the shop foreman -and another foreman—three or four men—lifted him bodily, laid him on a table where he remained for about 15 or 20 minutes until' the ambulance came. The driver placed a blanket around him, put a sheet around his head and took him to the hospital. The record indicates that plaintiff was seriously injured -as a -result of the accident.

The assignments of error are as follows: ■.

“1. The court, erred in granting defendant’s motion to strike petitioner’s interrogatories from the files.

“2. .The court erred when it granted defendant’s motion for a directed verdict and! ordered judgment thereon.

“3. The court erred in denying-petitioner’s motion for a new trial.”

Under the first assignment of error, the plaintiff claims that' the court committed prejudicial error in sustaining defendant’s motion, filed on June 24, 1960, to strike the interrogatories filed by -Edward W. Joyce. We can not consider the legal sufficiency of. the evidence relied upon by the trial, court in sustaining defendant’s motion to Strike plaintiff’s interrogatories, where such evidence is not. made a part of the bill' of exceptions. An examination of the bill of exceptions shows no record-containing such evidence. See Allstate Ins. Co. v. Dye, 113 Ohio App., 90, decided by .this court December. 15, 1960.

• ^This brings us to:a consideration of the second assignment of .error, namely, that the -court, erred when it sustained the motion of the defendant to direct a verdict and entered judgment thereon. - ■ ■ ......

■ It is a.fundamental proposition of law, too well established in? Ohio to require the citation of any extended authorities, that, upon;a motion to direct a verdict, the party against whom' the motion is made is entitled to have, the evidence construed most"'' strongly in his favor, :and, where, from .the evidence,- reasonable minds-may. reach different conclusions upon any question'off *55 ■fact, such question of fact is for the jury, and the test i& not whether the trial judge would set aside the verdict on the weight of the evidence. Hamden Lodge v. Ohio Fuel Gas Co., 127 Ohio St., 469; Wilkeson, Admr., v. Erskine & Son, Inc.,

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173 N.E.2d 692, 114 Ohio App. 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joyce-v-union-garbide-carbon-corp-ohioctapp-1961.