Kreft v. Great Lakes Stone & Lime Co.

184 N.W. 397, 215 Mich. 700, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 811
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1921
DocketDocket No. 16
StatusPublished

This text of 184 N.W. 397 (Kreft v. Great Lakes Stone & Lime Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kreft v. Great Lakes Stone & Lime Co., 184 N.W. 397, 215 Mich. 700, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 811 (Mich. 1921).

Opinion

Sharpe, J.

Defendant asks reversal of a judgment entered on a verdict for plaintiff in an action to recover damages for the death of plaintiff’s intestate while in defendant’s employ. The assignments of error raise substantially the same questions presented to the trial court on a motion for a new trial. His opinion, in denying such motion, so well states the facts and the law applicable thereto that we adopt it as our own:

“The plaintiff’s intestate, Frederick Firsch, was killed on July 22, 1918, by the premature explosion of a charge of dynamite which he. was assisting in placing in position for use in carrying on the business of the defendant in quarrying stone at its plant on the Lake Huron shore in Alpena county. The method employed by the defendant was to drill to a considerable depth a series of holes in a line at a proper distance back from the edge of the excavation of the quarry, load these holes with dynamite and explode the same by electricity. In this operation there was two sets or gangs of men employed. The ‘drillers’ who drilled the holes to be subsequently loaded or charged with dynamite, with which latter work the drillers [702]*702had nothing whatever to do, and the ‘blasters’ who placed, and pushed with a pole when necessary, the sticks of dynamite into the holes at the proper depth and position to be exploded. On the morning of the day of his death the deceased was taken from his work at ‘plug drilling’ in the bottom of the quarry by the foreman of the ‘blasters’ and put to work assisting such foreman in loading drill holes with dynamite. In pushing the dynamite, with a pole provided for that purpose, into the fifth or sixth hole an explosion occurred which caused the death of Mr. Firsch a few hours afterward in the ambulance which had come out from Alpena to remove him to the hospital in town.
“This action is brought under the survival act to recover damages for the alleged negligence of defendant resulting in the death of plaintiff’s intestate, and the sole ground of negligence submitted by the court to the jury was the claimed failure of defendant to instruct its employee as to the proper handling of dynamite when being placed or pushed into place in the drill holes, or to warn or caution him of the danger attending the same. Mr. Firsch, a young man 30 years of age at the time of his death, owned and carried on a smiall farm situate about-five miles from the plant of defendant. In the fall of 1917 he had worked at the quarry at duties not connected with blasting, except upon one occasion which will be referred to hereafter, and, returning in the spring of 1918, he had worked at and about drilling until haying time when he was away on his farm for a while, returning to work at the quarry on the morning of July 22.
“Mr. Cooley, the foreman in charge, stated in his testimony what occurred on that morning as follows:
‘A. On the morning of July 22, Monday morning, Mr. Firsch had returned to work after being absent for a week or ten days. I met him at the foot of the bluff about the middle of the quarry and he asked me what I had for him to do. I says “Fred, go over to number two shovel and drill whatever big stones is laying alongside.” I says, “I will be over that way after a little,” * * * and I went over, * * * and we went .up the hill and we started loading. We loaded the first hole, and we loaded the second hole and on the third hole [703]*703I began to'think that tbe pole' was being handled a little reckless and I said, all I said to Frederick, I says, “Frederick, handle the pole careful,” I says, “take it easy; we have got lots of time,” and we went on about our loading.
‘Q. Did he obey your instructions in that regard?
‘A. He obeyed my instructions until the pole went down the hole at the time of the explosion.
‘Q. On that morning state whether or not he used the tamping pole at any time without your express instructions?
‘A. After that first Instruction I gave him he didn’t. Whenever the pole went down in the hole I asked it to go — asked him to let it down.’
“As to the experience of, and warnings given to, Mr. Firsch in the short time the latter worked at the quarry in the fall of 1917, Mr. Cooley testified that Mr. Firsch worked for a few days at ‘plug drilling’ but mostly at other work—
‘Q. During the fall of 1917 I will ask you to state whether or not Mr. Firsch did any tamping on the hill?
‘A. The fall of 1917 Mr. Firsch helped me on one blast, * * * Mr. Firsch handled the tamping pole probably for three holes on the dynamite. I remember calling him, “Come and take the pole until he (Weise) gets back.” He came over and took the pole and we started loading the first hole and I didn’t see where it was necessary, the way he was handling the pole, to give him any instructions on that shot. He handled the pole very gently. He only helped me load two or three holes in that one shot.’ '
“These two occasions, one in 1917 and the other on July 22, 1918, are the only ones when deceased was required to do, or did any work in placing or pushing the dynamite into the drill holes in the limestone cliff of the quarry. And the foregoing testimony of Mr. Cooley, defendant’s foreman and witness, and the testimony of plaintiff’s witness, Ellsworth, embraces the whole case as to what instructions and warnings were, or were not given to deceased, and the meritorious question on this motion is — ‘Was the subject of defendant’s duty and liability in regard to such instructions and warnings properly submitted to the jury?’
“First. The testimony of Cooley and Ellsworth raised an issue that was necessarily for the jury and [704]*704not the court. If it be admitted that foreman Cooley warned or instructed deceased in exactly the words as testified by him, and as assumed by the court in the charge that he did, it still would “remain a question for the jury whether such instructions were adequate or sufficient. This proposition should be kept in mind while considering many of the questions raised on this motion, particularly as to the rejection by the court of certain requests to charge preferred by defendant.
“Second. Such issue was submitted to the jury by the court under instructions of the following substance: In the first place the jury was most emphatically told that the only ground of negligence submitted to them, or which they should consider at all in reaching a verdict, was the asserted failure of defendant to properly instruct deceased in the use of dynamite placed or pushed into the drill holes, or to warn him of the danger of improperly handling the same. And in this connection the jury was further told that Mr. Cooley in warning and instructing Firsch had the right, and it was his duty to consider and to act upon his own knowledge of Firsch’s experience, or his want of the same, gained from the fact that Firsch during his whole employment at the plant, both in 1917 and 1918, had been employed solely under the immediate supervision and direction of Cooley.
“The court said:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Smith v. Peninsular Car Works
27 N.W. 662 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1886)
Ribich v. Lake Superior Smelting Co.
48 L.R.A. 649 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1900)
Adams v. Grand Rapids Refrigerator Co.
125 N.W. 724 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1910)
Hosking v. Cleveland Iron Mining Co.
128 N.W. 777 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1910)
Borkowski v. American Radiator Co.
130 N.W. 640 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 N.W. 397, 215 Mich. 700, 1921 Mich. LEXIS 811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kreft-v-great-lakes-stone-lime-co-mich-1921.