Lee v. Smith

176 So. 2d 413, 248 La. 16, 1965 La. LEXIS 2017
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 7, 1965
Docket47210, 47213
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 176 So. 2d 413 (Lee v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Smith, 176 So. 2d 413, 248 La. 16, 1965 La. LEXIS 2017 (La. 1965).

Opinions

SUMMERS, Justice.

Metz Lee, who was employed by J. W. Smith, Jr., brought this suit against his employer for workmen’s compensation. His claim was for total disability resulting from injuries received in the course and scope 'of his employment on November 18, 1958, while unloading logs from a truck at the employer’s sawmill. He further prayed for medical expenses, penalties and attorney’s fees.

Smith in his an.swer alleged that he had advanced the sum pf $3,955 to Lee pending the outcome and settlement of a law suit against Key Life Insurance Company for compensation benefits for the temporary disability sustained by Lee, that Lee’s present disability was not related to the injury he received in the course and scope of his employment but was due to another injury he received when he fell in a boat on a fishing trip.

Smith then assumed the position of third party plaintiff and named Key Life Insurance Company as third party defendant alleging that in the event there should be judgment against him in favor of Lee, then, under the policy issued by Key Life Insurance Company covering injuries to his employees, he was entitled to recover for the injuries incurred by Lee to the extent of $2,000, the full amount due under the policy, plus $1,000.00 medical, or a total of $3,000.-00, less a credit for $616.90 already paid, together with double indemnity and attorney’s fees. The reply of Key Life Insurance Company as third party defendant was that the policy it issued was not workmen’s compensation insurance, but accident insurance, and furthermore the policy had lapsed for nonpayment of premiums.

Later Smith amended his answer to Lee’s suit for workmen’s compensation alleging that Lee’s recovery was barred under LSA-R.S. 23:1081 because of Lee’s wilful and deliberate failure to use a fork lift in unloading the logs, which was a safety device ..provided for his protection. > . .

The trial court awarded judgment .*in favor of Lee against Smith for workmen’s compensation for total and permanent disability, less a credit for $3,955.00 representing the payment of compensation for 113 weeks; for medical expenses in the sum of $1,251.90; interest; penalties; attorney’s fees in the amount of $500.00 and costs. The claim on the policy of insurance asserted by Smith as third party plaintiff against Key Life Insurance Company as third party defendant was denied.

Smith appealed from this judgment and Lee answered the appeal seeking an increase in attorney’s fees only. Insofar as Lee is concerned, therefore, there can be no question of an increase of any award except attorney’s fees.

[23]*23The court of appeal affirmed the award of compensation and medical expenses, holding that the defense of deliberate failure to use a safeguard was “not supported by the evidence”, but disallowed the award of penalties and attorney’s fees, being of the opinion that the issue raised was of such “serious import” the employee Lee was not entitled to those items. The trial court’s judgment denying the third party claim against Key Life Insurance Company was affirmed. See 162 So.2d 64.

We granted certiorari upon the application of Smith to review the adverse judgment, and we also granted certiorari upon the application of Lee on the question of penalties and attorney’s fees. See 246 La. 90,163 So.2d 361 (1964).

About 5:30 on the afternoon of November 18, 1958, Lee and Eldon Sibley, both employed by Smith, returned to the sawmill owned and operated by Smith with a truckload of logs. They pulled into the yard of the mill and, after parking, Sibley went to get a “fork lift” tractor to aid in unloading the truck. This unloading operation consisted simply of removing the logs from the truck and dumping them into the mill yard. Lee, while awaiting the arrival of the fork lift, unhooked two of the binder chains holding the logs in place on the truck. When the third or last chain was loosened logs fell from the truck striking Lee, causing him permanent and disabling injury.

The section of the Workmen’s Compensation Act upon which Smith relies to defeat Lee’s claim (LSA-R.S. 23:1081) provides that, “No compensation shall be allowed for an injury caused * * * by the injured employee’s deliberate failure to use an adequate guard or protection against accident provided for him.”

The fork lift is the device which Smith claims is a “guard or protection” against accident provided for his employees. As such, Smith contends, it was to be brought up to the side of the loaded log truck to serve as a holding device in order that the logs could not roll off the truck while the chains were being unfastened. Thus the fork lift, by retaining the logs, prevented their falling and enabled the worker handling the chains to escape injury. But we are of the opinion that this fork lift, a $20,000.00 machine, used extensively throughout the sawmill operation to move logs and lumber, by “unloading the log trucks, stacking lumber, putting logs on the ramp, loading lumber on trucks, taking lumber to the lumber yard and pushing sawdust”, was not provided as a guard or protection for employees but was a machine used in the overall operations at the sawmill. Though available at the time, the fork lift was often not available for unloading log trucks and, therefore, on such occasions, the unloading operation was done with a crane or even by hand. For these reasons it could hardly be considered as a [25]*25guard or protection provided for the protection of employees in the sense in which those terms are used in the compensation act.

The evidence further fails to make it clear that the employer had established a clear set of rules and instructed Lee concerning the use of the fork lift in the unloading operation. Nor had Lee been convinced of the effectiveness of the fork lift as a safety device for he testified, convincingly, that when the logs were stacked high enough on the truck it was possible for them to roll over the retaining braces on the fork lift and onto the operator of the fork lift or persons located nearby. In Lee’s mind, at least, the fork lift was not an adequate guard against danger from the higher logs. And the record fails to establish that his misgivings about the fork lift were unfounded, or that it was generally known among the employees that the fork lift was always to be used as the employer contends.

The evidence shows, too, that the fork lift had a use in connection with the unloading operation unrelated to its use as a guard or protection. When the chains holding the logs in place were unfastened, some of the logs would sometimes fall from the truck, sometimes none would fall. In either instance the fork lift was used to push the remaining logs off the truck and, when it was used, it was used for this purpose. When the fork lift was not used the logs were unloaded by a crane or by hand. The record therefore fails to convincingly establish that the fork lift was to be used by Lee or others solely as a guard or protection against falling logs when the chains were being unfastened.

When an employer invokes the defense that the injured employee deliberately failed to use an adequate guard or protection against accident provided for him, the employer bears the burden of proving that the safety device was provided as such, that the employee had knowledge of its function and adequacy and deliberately failed to use it. In the instant case this requirement has not been met.

In the interpretation of LSA-R.S. 23:1081 the courts of our State have required that the guard or protection be furnished primarily for the purpose of safety.

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Bluebook (online)
176 So. 2d 413, 248 La. 16, 1965 La. LEXIS 2017, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-smith-la-1965.