Levins v. Bancroft, Ross & Sinclair

38 So. 72, 114 La. 105, 1905 La. LEXIS 425
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 4, 1905
DocketNo. 15,218
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 38 So. 72 (Levins v. Bancroft, Ross & Sinclair) 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
Levins v. Bancroft, Ross & Sinclair, 38 So. 72, 114 La. 105, 1905 La. LEXIS 425 (La. 1905).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. J.

This suit was brought by plaintiff to recover damages in the sum of $11,000 for personal injury for'which plaintiff alleges that Bancroft, Ross & Sinclair are liable. The jury’s verdict was in his favor for $3,500.

Plaintiff was on the 14th day of January, 1902, an employé of defendants, and had been in their employ during the preceding four months.

He was their engineer, at a salary of $1.75 a day, and'had charge of their engine and boiler, and, in that place or position, plaintiff alleges that he was in charge of the engine room, and of the appurtenances therein, and he oiled the engine, cleaned it, wheeled coal from the coal pile outside of: the building to the coal bunker inside, and;, fed the boiler furnace with coal.

The record discloses that the defendants-, are the lessees of the foundry known until, recently as the “McCan Foundry,” on Tulane-avenue. Within the foundry building there* is a steam well, near to and in front of the engine — dug there in the earth by lessees’ lessor, to wit, Mr. McCan.

There was a cap over the so-called manhole on the well.

One of the points of difference between the plaintiff and defendants is whether there was necessity to step, as did the plaintiff, on this cap, or whether, as contended by defendants, it was equally as convenient to pass around the well.

The engine room is not large, but cramped, as such rooms usually are. The well in question was about equal distance between the breastplate or platform of the' engine, on one side, and a part of the boring mill which projected into the engine room, with little distance on either side.

The top of the well itself was flush with the floor. When the cap was fastened properly, it (the cap) rose slightly above the level of the floor. The well was in the passageway which the engineer and otheys followed [107]*107in passing from one side to the other, and directly in front of the engine.

Plaintiff, while wheeling coal on the day he met with the accident, was away from the engine about 35 feet, and could not see it. After the last wheelbarrow of coal had been brought in, he stepped to the engine, and found that it was greatly in need of oil. He applied himself to that work. He stepped on the cap over the manhole with his right foot, and raised his left to tread on the engine platform.

The cap over the manhole, having been raised by some one to take water, and not having been returned to its socket, gave way, and plaintiff’s^ foot and leg passed through to the bottom of this well, which was filled with warm steam and hot water. It scalded him severely. He was disabled for a time, and still feels its effects. His physician testified that he has an atrophy of the leg.

The warm water taken from the well is used freely by the workmen in washing their hands, twice a day. It happened frequently enough that one of the employes would go and get the water — usually one of the young apprentices. He was told by one of the officers to bring warm water to the washing room in the afternoon at about a quarter of 5. He attended to that duty with some care, and no casualty occurred. On the day that the plaintiff’s foot and leg were injured, another boy went for water. He said that on the way he met plaintiff, and asked his permission to take water out of the well, which plaintiff gave; that, • on his return from the well with the water, he again met the plaintiff, and said to him that he had carefully fastened the lid. This boy or young man, as a witness, stated that he had carefully returned the lid to its socket, pressed it down, and afterwards jumped and stamped upon it to make it certain that it was in its place. He also said something about the danger there was, and some things which do not seem to have impressed either judge or jury.

The record informs us that there were two small holes drilled in the cap, as an escape for the steam from the well, and to relieve the well of the possibly too great a pressure of the steam.

The steam, oozing through these holes, collected on or about the lid.

The shape of the bottom of this well is like that of a pot or kettle.

A rough sketch is annexed. The line between A and B in this sketch indicates the passageway. After the accident the lid in question was fastened and made secure. When in its socket it is not dangerous.

At the outset, in taking up the different questions presented for our decision, we state that we are not of the opinion that plaintiff was guilty of the gross carelessness and negligence charged by defendants. The well was in the foundry. It had been used many years without any accident. We take it that it was not unsafe when due care was taken in using it. At any rate, if there was any danger, it was not apparent. Nearly all machinery moved by steam becomes dan[109]*109gerous tn negligent hands, such as those by whom the “cap” in question was removed.

As the well was safe enough prior to the removal of the lid or cap, we do not consider that the condition of the well itself shows plaintiff’s negligence.

In the second place, defendants seek to sustain the proposition that, if the cap on the manhole was left unfastened, it was owing to the fault of plaintiff, who should have reported to them that some of the men were taking water from the well, and there was danger that they would fail to return the cap to its proper place.

That is expecting too much of a mere engineer, who has nothing to do with the men. No one else expected the danger. Why should more be expected of him than of the others? It had become usual with the men to get water from this well. At the date plaintiff was employed by the defendants, the men were taking water from this well. It would have placed }iim in a singular attitude towards his fellow workmen if he had attempted to stop them because of an asserted danger which nobody suspected. He was in charge of the machinery, and had nothing to do with the discipline of the men.

The defendants, in the next place, urge— and this, in our view, is the most serious ground of their defense — that plaintiff should not have undertaken to tread on the cap; that he should, on the contrary, have stepped over it or around it.

We have paused here, and have given that ground our most serious consideration. We gather from the record, that the cap’s surface was part of the surface of the floor, and that it was, prior to its removal, and failure to return it to its socket, properly about on a level with the floor.

Ordinarily it must have been considered safe enough to step on it. But it is contended that it was not in its. proper place, and that this was possible for plaintiff to see. It must be remembered that there was steam over the head of the well, kept down by the pressure of the cold temperature above it. The accident occurred on a cold day.

This steam, it seems, obstructed the view of plaintiff, who hastily came up and stepped into it- — the steam. The cap would have been in its proper place if it had not been removed.

Burns, one of the employés of defendants, removed the cap, and he failed to return it. He stoutly denies that he failed to return the cap. The boy’s statement did not convince the judge of the district court or the jury. There is a conflict between his testimony and that of other witnesses. The circumstances do not corroborate his statements.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 So. 72, 114 La. 105, 1905 La. LEXIS 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levins-v-bancroft-ross-sinclair-la-1905.