La Fleur v. M. A. Burns Lumber Co.

176 P. 58, 38 Cal. App. 279, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 212
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 26, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 1782.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 176 P. 58 (La Fleur v. M. A. Burns Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
La Fleur v. M. A. Burns Lumber Co., 176 P. 58, 38 Cal. App. 279, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 212 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The action was for damages caused by an injury in a lumber-mill. The cause was tried without a jury, and the court found in favor of plaintiff in the sum of three thousand dollars. The appeal is from 'the judgment and the order denying the motion for a new trial. The only claim for a reversal is that the evidence is insufficient to support certain material findings. Of them, the first one assailed is as follows:

“That at the time aforesaid, to wit, on or about the fifteenth day of November, 1913, and while plaintiff was employed by *281 defendant as aforesaid, certain machinery in said mill which the plaintiff was required to operate and oversee was imperfectly and improperly constructed and was defective and unsafe; said imperfection and unsafeness was caused by live chains rising above live rollers, which said chains and said rollers were revolving and rotating at right angles with each other; that by reason of said live chains rising above said live rollers said machinery was dangerous and unsafe in this, that said chains would come in contact with and catch upon the lumber and other sawed materials which were rolled out on said live rollers, and said chains would forcibly throw said lumber or other sawed material off of said live rollers, said rollers being too short to properly convey the timbers Avhic'h were usually rolled out on same. ” As to this finding it may be said that it is not disputed that, on said date, plaintiff was employed, as foreman, by defendant, to operate and oversee said machinery. That the said machinery was improperly constructed and that it was dangerous to operate, as specified in said finding, is abundantly supported by the testimony. There was strong evidence to the contrary, but with that, of course, we cannot be concerned. How is it possible to maintain that the trial court was not legally justified in its conclusion as to the character of the said machinery when we recall the following statements of witnesses? The plaintiff testified: “Basing my opinion upon my experience as a millwright, I would say that machinery as shown by the model is not properly constructed. The top of these chains ought to be under the surface of these rolls, and the rolls are too short for the timber they saw; they are twenty-four inches long and they should be thirty inches, or three feet long, anyway. The purpose of having the rolls along there is so you can run anything wide across it. The live skids and chains rise above the live rolls at a point almost halfway across. "When the timber is caught by the live chains it pulls it off into the slasher-saws. We had to have a man standing there with a bar at the north end of that truss to keep crowding the timbers clear over on this side, in order to get them through, and lots of times they would have to crowd them on and follow them clear through in order to get them over ... No mill is properly constructed that has the skids above the surface of the rolls. That skid should be below the surface.”

*282 The witness, G. R. Jones, an experienced millwright, also testified that in order to be properly constructed, “the skids must be below the rollers and the rollers ought to be longer.”

Witness W. E. Lane testified that the machinery was defective for the same reason, and “the rolls that were put into the truss in said mill were two feet long. We put in these rolls at the order of Mr. Broadwell. They were furnished to us.” Furthermore, that the purpose of these live chains is to “throw the slabs off the live rolls into the edger pits” and that the proper construction of a skid is “to have clearance from the rolls so the timber can pass over without catching. I mean below the live rolls. ’ ’

W. H. Gusha also testified to the same effect and declared: “In the operation of the mill, the result would be that timber came along there and would strike these things there like it does there now, that wouldn’t go over the thing. That would carry it over here into these saws. Anything—don’t make any difference what it is slabs, boards, timbers or anything else.”

We may quote this from Charles Noble’s testimony: “That transfer skid is too high, too high to let your timbers come down,” and as to the rolls he said they should be three feet long, “so that the machinery won’t drop off. They don’t always come down the rolls straight. If it is narrow rolls, th^ey drop off.”

There is no controversy as to the competency of these witnesses, nor is it pretended that the subject is not a matter of expert testimony. If the foregoing does not justify the court’s finding as to the character of the machinery, then we are at a loss to understand what should be required.

Nor is there any more doubt as to the legal support for this finding: “That said defendant was, shortly prior to the said fifteenth day of November, 1913, warned by plaintiff of the defective and unsafe condition of the machinery in said sawmill, in the particulars hereinabove, in paragraph IY, set forth, and said defendant had, after being so warned by plaintiff, promised to repair said machinery, and to put the same in good repair and in a safe condition, but defendant despite said warning, and contrary to said promise, did fail and neglect to do so; that plaintiff had shortly prior to said fifteenth day of November, 1913, requested of defendant permission to repair said defective machinery, and to put the *283 same in a safe condition and had requested defendant for permission to place and keep the same in good repair, but defendant did at all times refuse to permit plaintiff and did fail to authorize plaintiff to put said machinery in a good and safe condition; that at no time was it the duty of plaintiff, nor did plaintiff have the authority or permission, nor had he at any time been delegated by defendant to put said machinery in good repair or in a perfect condition, nor did plaintiff at any time have in his charge or under his control the assistance or supplies or tools necessary to enable him to keep said machín; ery in good repair and in a safe and perfect condition or working order.”

Every material fact contained therein is asserted by the plaintiff in his testimony. He testified that after becoming foreman he directed the attention of Mr. Danforth, the manager of the company, to these defects and asked permission to overhaul the machinery, but Mr. Danforth said: “We might do.it some time but we can’t do it now.” As to the repairs he desired to make, the plaintiff testified: “I was to build that truss over and I wanted to get rolls the same length that came from the head saw right straight through. I wanted to tear that slasher table out and shove it ahead, so that when the slab pulls through it won’t catch in the conveyer and break the saws; I wanted twelve-inch rolls, so it would run above those skids, and get longer skids; the chains would run the same way only they would be under the surface of the rolls. ’ ’ As to his authority to make changes, he testified positively that he had no such authority “without receiving orders from the managing officers. I had to make the application to Mr. Dan-forth ; if anything broke I had to go to Mr. Danforth and get an order to get it. I couldn’t do any repairs excepting keep the mill moving”; that he could not take down anything and put in new machinery without - asking.

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Related

Collins v. Collins
52 P.2d 1169 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1935)
Lafleur v. M. A. Burns Lumber Co.
205 P. 102 (California Supreme Court, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 P. 58, 38 Cal. App. 279, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/la-fleur-v-m-a-burns-lumber-co-calctapp-1918.