Larsen v. Covington Lumber Co.

101 P. 717, 53 Wash. 146, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 1285
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1909
DocketNo. 7518
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 101 P. 717 (Larsen v. Covington Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larsen v. Covington Lumber Co., 101 P. 717, 53 Wash. 146, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 1285 (Wash. 1909).

Opinion

Crow, J.

Action by Elias Larsen against the Covington Lumber Company, a corporation, to recover damages for per-* sonal injuries. From a verdict and judgment in plaintiff’s favor, the defendant appeals.

We will only consider appellant’s contention that the trial court erred in denying its challenge to the evidence, and its motion for a directed verdict. Appellant owns and operates a sawmill in King county, in which the respondent, at the time of his injury, was employed as marker or tallyman. Numerous acts of negligence were pleaded, but they were all abandoned on the trial except the alleged negligence of one Charles Crawford, who was the appellant’s head sawyer and who was so designated, not because his position was necessarily superior to other employees, but because he was in charge of and operated the saws known as head saws. The mill was operated from west to east. Logs were brought to the deck, transferred to the carriage, were cut by the head saws, and thence the lumber passed to the rolls, the edger, and cut-off saws, [148]*148to be cut into desired widths and lengths. At the head or west end of the mill were two large circular head saws, one above the other. To their immediate right and south was the carriage way upon which the log carriage moved east and west. The carriage would be brought to the west, and loaded with a log, which was fastened thereon by a workman known as the “dogger,” and adjusted to the cut by another workman known as the “setter,” both of whom acted in obedience to signals given by the head sawyer. The sawyer then caused the carriage to move eastward until the saws engaged the log throughout its entire length, when he caused the carriage to move backward for a resetting of the log, preparatory to another cut. The pieces thus cut from the logs passed eastward to other operatives. The head saws rested on a large frame, immediately over which a screen was suspended to protect the sawyer from dust and splinters. In front of the frame, and to the left or north of the carriage way, was a system of live rolls, known as “section No. 1,” twenty-six and one-half inches high, and extending easterly about forty-eight feet. These rolls were controlled by a lever in charge of the offbearer, who stood at their west end. When a clear piece of lumber was cut from a log it dropped on this first section of rolls and then, by a system of transfers, also operated by the offbearer, was transferred towards the north to other rolls immediately in front of the edger saw, and thence by the edgerman into the edger itself, to be cut into desired widths. The lumber was then transferred from the edger to the respondent as tallyman, who marked it,'and it then passed to the cut-off saw to be cut into the lengths indicated by him.

In the same line with the first section of live rolls was a second section, separated therefrom by a passageway about twenty-one inches wide, and then extending east about thirty-two feet to the cut-off saw, which was about eighty feet from the head saws. The respondent’s position was along the second section of the rolls, near the edger and slightly to the east of the first section. The second section of rolls was con[149]*149trolled and operated by a lever located at its eastern end, in charge of the cut-off sawyer. The respondent as marker, however, could by signals direct the cut-off sawyer in its operation when it became proper or necessary for him to do so. He marked and tallied the lengths into which the cut-off sawyer was to cut the lumber passed to him. If the cut from a log was a slab, it at once passed over both sections of rolls to the cut-off sawyer who cut it into wood, and sent it out of the mill through a conveyor. If the cut from the log was all clear lumber, it was at once transferred to the rolls in front of the edger, thence through the edger, past the respondent, was marked by him, and thence sent to the cut-off saw. If the cut from the log was part clear lumber and part slab, it was at once sent over both sections to the cut-off sawyer, who cut the slab part into wood and, when he had a favorable opportunity, sent the good piece or cant back over the second section of rolls, which he reversed for that purpose, and on to the first section, to be thence transferred to the rolls in front of the edger.

It was during the performance of this last-mentioned work that the respondent was injured. The head sawyer had cut from the log a piece of partly slab and partly good lumber, which was sent over both sections to the cut-off sawyer, who cut the slab into wood. He then looked towards the head sawyer and, having seen that he was giving a signal to the setter, reversed the second section of rolls and returned the cant to the first section. The cant was about fourteen feet in length and ten to fourteen inches in width, and the respondent took hold of it with his hands to assist in transferring it to the rolls in front of the edger. Either through his efforts or in some other manner, it assumed an angular position across the east end of the first section of rolls, and came- in contact with the log on the advancing saw carriage, which pushed it and the respondent against the edger and severely injured him.

All of the above facts are shown by undisputed evidence. [150]*150The respondent contends that the head sawyer was negligent in running the log and carriage against the cant, and in not stopping the carriage until the cant could be transferred to the edger rolls. The evidence further shows that the log was about fifty inches in diameter at its larger end, and fifty feet in length; that it required one minute to saw its entire length; that three sets of saws, the head saws, the edger saws, and the cut-off saw, were operated by different employees; that the head sawyer, the edgerman, and the respondent as marker, each had written orders from the superintendent of the mill, detailing the sizes and quantity of lumber to be cut, and directing their work; and that these written orders gave information to the head sawyer as to the thickness of his cuts, to the edgerman as to the width of his, and to the respondent, as to the lengths he was to mark.

Respondent contends (1) that it was the head sawyer’s duty to maintain a constant watch along both sections of rolls, and see that they were clear before moving the carriage; that if he had done so he could have stopped the carriage before the log struck the cant, and that his failure to do so was negligence; (2) that he was the vice principal of the appellant in general charge of the saws, rolls, and men, and that his negligence was therefore the negligence of the master. The appellant contends (1) that the head sawyer’s duties were not those claimed by respondent; (2) that he was not negligent; (3) that he was not a vice principal, but was respondent’s fellow servant; and (4) that respondent was guilty of contributory negligence.

We think appellant’s contentions are all sustained by undisputed evidence. There is no competent evidence showing or tending to show that the head sawyer was authorized to give orders to the respondent, or to any of the workmen other than the dogger and setter, or that he had any control over them. We do not overlook the fact that the respondent himself and one Calderwood, an alleged expert, who had never worked in the mill, in substance testified that, in their opinion, [151]*151Crawford, as head sawyer, was in full charge of the workmen.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 P. 717, 53 Wash. 146, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 1285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larsen-v-covington-lumber-co-wash-1909.