Louisville & Nashville R. R. v. Hall

69 So. 106, 193 Ala. 648, 1915 Ala. LEXIS 148
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 69 So. 106 (Louisville & Nashville R. R. v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville & Nashville R. R. v. Hall, 69 So. 106, 193 Ala. 648, 1915 Ala. LEXIS 148 (Ala. 1915).

Opinion

GARDNER, J.

Action by appellee against appellant under the Employers’ Liability Act (section 3910, Code 1907). Count 1 was eliminated by demurrer, and the cause proceeded to trial upon counts 2 and 3. Count 2 is under subdivision 1 of said section 3910, charging a defect in ways, works, machinery, or plant of the defendant, in that a jigger, or small turntable, was defective. Count 3 charges plaintiff’s injury as a proximate result of negligence of one Matthews, employed by defendant and intrusted with superintendence, and while in the exercise of such superintendence, as follows: “Whilst in charge of a gang of men operating a jigger, or small turntable. Said negligence consisted in ordering the men under him to move a set of car trucks with a jigger not sufficient to hold said truck.”

The following quoted extract from the evidence offers a definition of a “jigger,” as disclosed by this record : “A jigger is a turntable which can be used from one place of the yard to another. * * * A jigger consists of two short rails bound together at the back, [650]*650and also through the middle, with crosspieces. The rails are exactly the same width apart as the track. The rails are made wedge-shaped on one (end), and on the other there is a block, and on the end where the block is there is a rod which connects the rails, and there is a heavy piece of timber, looks something like a cross-tie, which connects the rail, and underneath this piece of timber there is a piece of metal called a center plate. This piece of metal is round-shaped and about 6 inches in diameter.”

And by another definition: “It consists of two angle irons which are flat on one end and about 3% inches high on the other. There is a tie in the center of the two angle irons. The flat end of the jigger is .open so that the wheels of a truck will roll upon them to the other end of the jigger, where the angle irons are about 3% inches high. There is an iron brace which runs from one angle iron to the other, parallel to the tie, which is in the center, and on the high end of the jigger a block is bolted for the purpose of keepiug trucks from running over. This jigger is used for the purpose of rolling trucks which are on the track upon the jigger, and then the jigger can be turned so as to roll the trucks off that track onto another one, and this is its purpose.”

The evidence further shows that in using the jigger it was rested upon a “block of wood” or “piece of dead wood,” as it was called, which block on this occassion was put down between the ties; and one witness for the plaintiff estimated its size as being about 26 or 3i) inches long, 5 inches thick, and 12 inches wide, and the same witness stated that the cross-ties were about 12 inches apart, and the block of wood was placed parallel with and between the cross-ties, and the ties were filled in with cinders, but did not know whether entirely or not; [651]*651that this block of wood was “the same size block as had been used all the time, * * * and was in good shape and condition”; that the jigger was not fastened to the block, and the block did not turn with the jigger.

(1) Count 2, as previously stated, rested for recovery upon a defective jigger or turntable, and under the authorities in this state the plaintiff is confined to proof of the negligence specified.- — L & N. R. R. Co. v. Lowe, 158 Ala. 397, 48 South. 99. The definitions given for a “jigger” in this record do not include the block or piece of dead wood upon which it is generally rested, as a part of the jigger, and plaintiff seems to have offered no proof sufficient to show that it is a part thereof. It is not connected therewith, and it may. be the jigger, as described in the above definition, is a complete instrument or machine independent of the block of wood, and that what is really required is that it rests upon a sufficiently solid' foundation. No witness seems to refer to the block of wood as a part of the jigger; the nearest approach thereto was when it was referred to as the baseboard on which the jigger rested. But, however this may be, and conceding (for the purpose of this case) that the block was a part of the jigger, we are of the opinion that plaintiff has not made out his case under either of the counts.

(2) Under count 2 the burden was on the plaintiff to reasonably satisfy the jury that a defect existed in. the jigger, that such defect was the proximate cause of the injury alleged, and that “said defect arose from, or had not been discovered or remedied owing to, the negligence of the master or employer, or of some person in the service of the master or employer,” etc. — L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Lowe, supra; Tuck v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 98 Ala. 152, 12 South. 168.

[652]*652At the time of the alleged injury the plaintiff was engaged in work for the defendant in its shops in New Decatur, working on a car, hut on work in no manner connected with the jigger, to; which his hack was turned, and from which under ordinary conditions he was standing at a safe distance. One Matthews had charge of the jigger, and ordered the men to roll some car trucks on the jigger for the purpose of moving them, when it slipped and struck the plaintiff on the leg. All the evidence shows the alleged injury was the result of the jigger slipping. It is the plaintiffs theory that the slipping was caused by the block of wood tipping or tilting, and that this is a result of a defective block and jigger. The block was placed parallel with and in between the cross-ties;, it seems, and plaintiff’s witness gives the width of the block and the distance between the cross-ties as about the same — 12 inches. The fact that the width of the block appears to- be such as to fit in between the cross-ties, taken in connection with the purposes of a jigger to move car trucks and place them on the track, etc., may be. considered as of some significance in finding a reason why the block of wood was of that particular width. The plaintiff seems to-insist that, if the block had been 36 inches wide instead of 12, on this occasion, it would have been less likely to' tilt, and that this proof tended to show a defect; and he further insists that, had a pin been placed through the jigger and into a hole in the block of wood, the jigger would have been less likely to slip, and that, as there was no such pin, this also' tended to' show a defect.

The proof was without dispute that the block of wood was in good condition, with no defects whatever; that it was the proper size and the kind ordinarily used. [653]*653The plaintiff himself knew nothing about a jigger, but his witness Holt, in speaking of this block said: “This block of wood was put down there as a baseboard; was the same size block as was used all the time and as has been used since then. It was a rectangular piece of wood, and ivas in good shape and condition, so far as I know. I suppose the jigger was in good condition, too.”

(3) No proof was offered by the plaintiff to show that a larger block had ever been used in such work, or that one larger was practical or best, and there is no evidence whatever tending to show that this block was not in every respect reasonably suited for the purposes for which it was used.

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Bluebook (online)
69 So. 106, 193 Ala. 648, 1915 Ala. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-r-r-v-hall-ala-1915.