Miers v. Truck Insurance Exchange

180 So. 2d 559, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 3850
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 30, 1965
DocketNo. 1531
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 180 So. 2d 559 (Miers v. Truck Insurance Exchange) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miers v. Truck Insurance Exchange, 180 So. 2d 559, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 3850 (La. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

HOOD, Judge.

Mrs. Adriel Miers, Jr., individually and as tutrix of her minor children, instituted this suit for damages for the death of her husband. The suit was originally filed against four parties, but it was dismissed as to two of them, leaving as the sole remaining defendants, Bailey Transportation Company, Inc., and its liability insurer, Truck Insurance Exchange. After trial, judgment was rendered by the trial court rejecting plaintiff’s demands, and plaintiff has appealed.

Another tort action arising out of the same accident was instituted by Earl Stro-ther against the same defendants, and that suit was consolidated with this one for trial and appeal. Judgment was rendered adversely to plaintiff in that suit, and plaintiff appealed. We are deciding the companion suit on this date. See Strother v. LeJeune et al., La.App., 180 So.2d 563.

Plaintiff’s husband, Adriel Miers, Jr., and the plaintiff in the companion suit, Earl Strother, were seriously injured on May 18, 1959, while they were working as employees of Bill Murray & Company. Miers died a few days later as a result of the injuries which he sustained on that occasion.

At the time these injuries were sustained, Bill Murray & Company was the principal contractor engaged in laying a sixteen-inch pipeline in Calcasieu Parish. Bailey Transportation Company, Inc., was a sub-contractor of Murray, and under the terms of that sub-contract Bailey was to “string” the pipe along the right-of-way. The right-of-way for the pipeline ran parallel with and adjacent to a railroad right-of-way, and above both of these rights-of-way there existed a high-voltage electric highline.

W. O. Bailey, the president of Bailey Transportation Company, Inc., was actively in charge of the work which was being performed under this sub-contract. Bailey had several pieces of heavy equipment which were being used to string the pipe on this job, one piece of equipment being a “gin pole truck.” This truck was equipped with a mechanical structure or device, known as a “gin pole” or “boom.” The gin pole was located on the rear of the truck, and by means of attached pulleys and cables and the power provided by the engine of the truck, the gin pole or boom could be raised or lowered, and it was designed to lift heavy objects. It was used here to load, unload, lift and move heavy joints of pipe. There was a cab on the truck, which’ was occupied by the driver when the truck was being moved or driven. When the gin pole was being used, the person who operated it sat in a seat located to the side of and behind the cab, facing the rear of the truck, and among the controls which he operated in using the gin pole was a clutch and an accelerator. The clutch pedal in the rear of the truck was connected by some mechanical means to the clutch pedal in the cab, so that when one of these pedals was depressed or released the other would also be depressed or released. The same type of connection existed between the two accelerators. When the gin pole was in a raised position, it extended high enough into the air to enable the top of the gin pole to come in contact with the electric highlines.

At about 2:30 p. m. on May 18, 1959, Bailey’s men had completed their day’s work and they left the job. Shortly thereafter, L. C. Anderson, the pipe foreman em[561]*561ployed by Murray, notified Bailey that he needed to have two more joints of pipe moved from one side of the railroad track to the other. Bailey informed Anderson that his men had left for the day, and Anderson thereupon inquired as to whether he could use Bailey’s gin pole truck for the purpose of moving these two joints of pipe, with employees of Murray operating the truck. Bailey consented to their use of this truck. Anderson thereupon got on the back of the truck, in the proper position for operating the gin pole, and by manipulating the controls located there he unloaded two joints of pipe from a pipe truck and placed them on the ground. He then picked up one of these joints of pipe and lifted it across to the other side of the railroad, using the gin pole on the truck for that purpose. Anderson then proceeded to pick up the second joint of pipe with the gin pole, and after doing so he ordered L. D. Lejeune, another employee of Murray, to get into the cab of the truck and drive it forward while this joint of pipe was being held suspended above the ground. Pursuant to these instructions, Lejeune got into the cab of the truck, drove the truck forward under instructions from Anderson, and while the truck was being driven forward the upper part of the gin pole either struck or came in close proximity to the electric highline, causing high voltage electricity to flow through the gin pole, cables and the pipe which was being suspended by those cables. Miers and Strother, both of whom were employees of Bill Murray & Company, were assisting in the unloading and moving of these joints of pipe at that time. Miers was hooking and unhooking the cable to the pipes, and Strother was “buffing” the ends of the pipes. Both were either touching the pipe or were in close proximity to it when the gin pole came in contact with the electric highline. The electricity flowing through the gin pole, cables and pipe caused Miers and Strother to receive severe electrical shocks and burns. As we have already mentioned, Miers died a few days later from the injuries which he received in that accident.

Plaintiffs contend that the accelerator and clutch of the gin pole truck were defective, that these defects caused the accident, that Bailey was aware of these defects, and that he failed to notify the persons who were operating the truck of such defects. Plaintiffs argue that the proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of Bailey in maintaining and permitting the use of a defective and dangerous truck, in failing to warn Lejeune of the condition of the truck, in failing to properly observe and supervise the operation of said truck in the proximity of dangerous high-voltage wires, and in calling upon unskilled and untrained persons to operate a dangerous and complicated machine which was known to have radical defects.

The first important issue presented is whether the gin pole truck was defective, and if so, was the defective condition of that truck a proximate cause of the accident.

The trial judge concluded “that the plaintiffs have failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that there was any defect in the operations of the truck "Vhat was a proximate cause of the accident.” The established rule is that the trial judge’s findings of fact, particularly those involving the credibility of witnesses testifying before him, are entitled to great weight, and his conclusions as to the facts will not be disturbed unless found to be clearly erroneous. Hudson v. Arceneaux, La.App. 3 Cir., 169 So.2d 731 (writ refused).

Robert Ousley, who was working for Bailey as a heavy equipment operator at the time this accident occurred, testified that he examined this truck a day or two before the accident and operated it that morning, and that he determined then that the accelerator and the clutch on the back of the truck would stick occasionally when depressed. He concluded that a spring on the accelerator was not strong enough to make it return to its former position after being depressed, and that the truck needed greasing. He testified that he told Bailey about [562]*562these defects in the truck shortly before the accident occurred.

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180 So. 2d 559, 1965 La. App. LEXIS 3850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miers-v-truck-insurance-exchange-lactapp-1965.