Livingston v. Morarend

149 N.W.2d 850, 260 Iowa 530, 1967 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 769
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 4, 1967
Docket52455
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 149 N.W.2d 850 (Livingston v. Morarend) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Livingston v. Morarend, 149 N.W.2d 850, 260 Iowa 530, 1967 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 769 (iowa 1967).

Opinion

Snell, J.

Defendants appeal from judgment following a jury verdict for plaintiff Lorrell Livingston in a farm accident ease. The jury allowed nothing to plaintiff Lela Livingston on her claim for loss of consortium. She has not appealed. Ray Barnhart, a fellow employee of plaintiff originally named as a defendant, was dropped as a defendant when plaintiff’s petition was recast. Basically, the issue before us is the sufficiency of the evidence to generate a jury question.

Defendant, Veryl Morarend, is a farm owner and operator. Plaintiff, Lorrell Livingston, is a farmer and neighbor.

Defendants, Robert Sehaub and Burdette Schenke, are farmers and the owners of silo filling equipment with which they do custom work. At the time of plaintiff’s accident the parties were engaged in filling a silo on the Morarend farm with chopped hay. Defendants Sehaub and Schenke furnished the machinery, equipment and the labor of two men. Plaintiff was working on an exchange of work basis with defendant Morarend.

The machine involved in plaintiff’s accident was a long hopper blower used in filling the silo.

The hopper, with a flanged top, was about nine feet long. A wagon, when backed into position, could unload directly into the hopper. A chain type conveyor at the bottom of the hopper moved the chopped fodder to the blower that blew the fodder up and into the silo.

Hinges and springs at the end of the hopper next to the blower permit the hopper to be raised and lowered. When raised it is in a vertical position against the silo. When lowered it is parallel to and rests on the ground.

The hopper is raised out of the way to facilitate the movement of loaded wagons from one side to the other to be unloaded. When the way is clear the hopper is lowered and the wagon backed into position so that the contents can be moved (conveyed or forkéd) directly into the hopper. The machinery is then started and the fodder is unloaded, conveyed and blown into the silo.

*533 The operation here involved required men in the field to cut and chop the hay, haulers to haul the fodder from the field to the silo and at least two men to run the machinery and fork the fodder into the hopper. There was mechanical equipment to unload the wagons but some help by a man with a fork or rake was needed.

Extending from the outer end of the hopper are two bars with a pin-type hitch. It is a permanent installation to aid in moving the equipment from one location to another. There was evidence that this hitch had originally been equipped with a jack stand to level the hopper and hold it above the ground. Defendants Schenke and Sehaub had purchased the blower hopper as used equipment and it had never been equipped with a jack stand during their ownership. Without the jack stand the hopper rested on the ground. Whether it was level would depend on the contour of the ground.

On each side of the hopper at the blower end was a spring three feet long and about three inches in diameter. The tension provides help in raising the hopper. The springs were adjustable but were rusted and had not been adjusted. It took a lift of 20 to 25 pounds to start the hopper up. To raise the hopper one man at times but usually two, one on each side, lifted from the sides near the far end.

There is a conflict in the testimony as to who was doing what when plaintiff was injured. As the hopper was being raised he was struck by the hitch extending from the end of hopper.

At first plaintiff did not realize that he had suffered any serious injury. Trouble from his injury became apparént in a few days. Medical treatment, hospitalization, cystoscopie examination and surgery for draining of an abscess and repair of a damaged urethra followed. Some permanent injury remains.

Plaintiff sued for his injuries and damage and over defendants’ vigorous and timely objections the case was submitted to the jury.

Defendants denied that plaintiff was injured by any proximate negligence on their part and as affirmative defenses de *534 fendant Morarend pleaded the “Fellow Servant Rule” and “assumption of risk.” The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $8500.

As against defendant Morarend the court submitted three specifications of negligence alleged by plaintiff: failure to provide plaintiff with a safe place to work, failure to warn of danger, and failure to instruct as to safe methods of operation of the blower.

As against defendants Schenke and Schaub the court submitted two specifications of negligence alleged by plaintiff: failure to warn, of alleged dangers in connection with operation of the equipment, including any danger which might result from allowing silage or debris to accumulate around the hopper, and failure to provide a competent person to direct the operation of the equipment.

The jury was thoroughly and accurately instructed on all issues. There is no present challenge to the accuracy of the instructions.

None of the defendants was at the silo when plaintiff was hurt. Morarend and Schenke were in the field mowing and chopping hay. Schaub was not at the farm. He had furnished a replacement for the day. Plaintiff and a fellow employee had been raking off the hay into the hopper. Another employee was at the silo inserting the doors as the silo was filled.

There was a conflict in the evidence as to plaintiff’s experience and familiarity with the operation of the equipment. There was testimony also disputed that there was an accumulation of hay and debris around the end of the hopper covering the protruding hitch.

Plaintiff said he had not noticed and was not aware of the protruding hitch. He testified: “When I was actually struck by the hitch I was looking toward the silo, to help lift the hopper. 1 didn’t go around looking right at the ground, was looking where I was going.” Just where plaintiff was standing at the time and who was lifting the hopper is not entirely clear. A fellow employee said he had his hands on the side of the hopper but did no actual lifting. He said plaintiff was lifting from the end and was caught by the hitch.

*535 There was testimony that none of the defendants had given any instructions as to operation of the equipment, where to stand in lifting the hopper or any warning as to the danger incident thereto. There was evidence from which a jury might conclude that the absence of a jack stand that would keep the hopper and hitch off the ground and in plain sight created an extra hazard.

Plaintiff’s evidence was thin but it cannot be disputed that there was inherent danger in the operation of the equipment. The jury could and obviously did conclude that defendants failed in proper precautions for the safety of the workers. To resolve such questions is what juries are for. It is not for us to substitute our judgment for that of the jury.

I. While the problem here is basically factual, i.e., the sufficiency of the evidence to generate a jury question, well established rules must be kept in mind.

We view the evidence in the light most favorable to the party against whom the motion is made. Rule 344(f) (2), Rules of Civil Procedure, as amended.

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Bluebook (online)
149 N.W.2d 850, 260 Iowa 530, 1967 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingston-v-morarend-iowa-1967.