Manchester v. Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co.

46 N.E.2d 780, 24 Ohio Law. Abs. 658, 18 Ohio Op. 503, 1937 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1056
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 4, 1937
DocketNo 2357
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 46 N.E.2d 780 (Manchester v. Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manchester v. Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co., 46 N.E.2d 780, 24 Ohio Law. Abs. 658, 18 Ohio Op. 503, 1937 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1056 (Ohio Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

OPINION

By CARTER, J.

This cause is in this court on appeal on questions of law. The action is one for wrongful death. The issues having been joined, the cause came on for trial to the court and jury, resulting in a verdict for plaintiff-appellee in the sum of $31,963.00, and judgment rendered thereon by the trial court. The errors urged are as follows:

1. The court erred in failing to instruct the jury that the crane operator, Dzuracki, was a servant of Rust Company at the time of the accident.
2. Defendant’s employes were guilty of no negligence in the premises.
3. The judgment is against the weight of the evidence in that same is grossly excessive.
4. The court erred in permitting and condoning misconduct of plaintiff’s counsel in his argument to the jury.

Plaintiff’s decedent, Don Yeager, was an employe of the Rust Engineering Company, an independent contractor, doing certain work for the defendant on the construction of a new mill. Defendant’s building, in which the accident occurred, was some six to seven hundred feet in length east to west, and about seventy-five feet in width north and south. Near the north wall and about two hundred feet west of the east end of the building was a rectangular pit in the floor, approximately thirty feet long and twenty feet wide. This pit extended four feet below the floor level and had a barricade around it some three feet high. The pit was to be used as a base for a machine. In finishing the pit for this purpose it was necessary to chip concrete from certain parts of it, and Yeager and another Rust Engineering Company employe were engaged in doing this work, using a compressed air chipper for the purpose. At the time of his injury which resulted in his death, Yeager was sitting in this pit, his legs stretched in front of him, chipping this concrete. On the north and south wall of the building, about twenty to twenty-five feet from the floor, was a crane track which ran the entire length of the building. On this track was an over-head crane, operated by electricity. The crane had on it a cab or control room situated under the structure of the crane and at the south end of it. The crane extended across the width of the building by means of a steel frame. On this frame was what is referred to as a “trolley.” This is a movable carriage which runs back and forth on the crane frame. The crane proper ran east and - west. The carriage or trolley moved north and south. In traveling from the east end of the building toward the west end, the crane would pass directly over the pit wherein Yeager was working.

On the day of the accident, March 29th, 1935, defendant’s rigger crew was engaged in raising a large pipe, a section of a gas fine, from the floor up to a position on the wall of the building. This was a steel pipe, some eighteen inches in diameter and twenty-five to thirty feet in length, V shaped, so it would fit in a comer, and weighed about a ton.

The rigger crew had fastened a set of blocks or falls to the girders of the roof, above the crane track, and connected the other end of the blocks to the pipe by means of a sling fine at the bend in the pipe. This raising operation was taking place about twenty feet east of the pit where Yeager was working, and in fine with it. The rigger crew raised the pipe in the air until it was standing on its legs; that is, in a V shape. The man power was insufficient to raise the pipe with one set of blocks, and another set was to be employed. This is done by hooking a second set of blocks into the fall line of the first set, thereby doubling the leverage and [660]*660making the lift much easier. With the pipe in the position as above indicated, the rope holding it was snubbed around a housing, with a man or two standing by, until the second set of blocks were secured. While the pipe was suspended as above indicated, the crane without warning was operated toward the west end of the mill, and in so doing struck the rope, carried the pipe somewhat forward till the rope broke, the pipe falling and striking plaintiff’s decedent, causing death shortly thereafter.

The Bust Engineering Company, in doing its work under its contract with the Youngstown Sheet & Tube Company, defendant herein, frequently needed the use of a crane, and there had been some arrangement, which will be referred to later in this opinion, by which the Rust Engineering Company could use in their work, as independent contractor, the crane. Dzuracki was the crane man, and when he went to work the day of the accident, he was ordered by his foreman, the Youngstown Sheet & Tube Company, to go and operate the crane. For a considerable time prior to the accident the craneman was hauling concrete from north to south on the extreme east end of the mill for the Rust Engineering Company; that is he was running the trolley back and forth on the crane, carrying concrete. Finally a bucket of concrete was fastened to the crane and the operator was directed by a foreman of the Rust Engineering Company to take it to the west end of the mill, and on this trip the accident occurred.

Yeager, at his death, was twenty-four years of age, married, had one child, age two, and one child born several months after his death. He was employed by the Rust Engineering Company as a laborer, and received at that time 45c per hour.

The allegations of the amended petition referable to the claimed liability of the defendant company are as follows: That the defendant, the Youngstown Sheet & Tube Company, is an Ohio corporation, and as such operates and maintains a large plant for the manufacture and production of iron and steel and products usually manufactured therefrom, in the city of Campbell, Mahoning County, and was at the time of the accident constructing a large plant, known as a wide strip mill, for the manufacture of wide sheets of steel; that the Rust Engineering Company was given a contract for the concrete floor work of the building; that Donald Yeager, the deceased was employed by the Rust Engineering Company to do certain work upon the concrete floor of the building, and was in the course of his employment when injured.

It is alleged that The Youngstown Sheet & Tube Company, through its agents and employes, attempted to erect a large steel pipe in the building, directly over and above the place where plaintiff’s decedent was required to work. It is further alleged that the defendant company was negligent in the handling of the pipe, in that it permitted the same to be suspended by ropes which were inadequate to support the same securely, and which were liable to be cut if struck by an object while supporting this heavy pipe, and that the defendant company was further negligent in causing and permitting a crane to be operated so as to come into violent contact with said ropes, thereby cutting and severing the ropes and permitting the steel pipe to fall, when the defendant company knew, or, in the exercise of ordinary care, should have known that to come in contact with these ropes would sever the same and cause the pipe to fall upon plaintiff’s decedent, and that the company was further negligent in attempting to suspend said steel pipe over the place where plaintiff’s decedent was required to work, and in so doing without giving any warning whatever to plaintiff’s decedent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 N.E.2d 780, 24 Ohio Law. Abs. 658, 18 Ohio Op. 503, 1937 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manchester-v-youngstown-sheet-tube-co-ohioctapp-1937.