New v. McMillan

191 P. 160, 79 Okla. 70
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 25, 1920
Docket10071
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 191 P. 160 (New v. McMillan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New v. McMillan, 191 P. 160, 79 Okla. 70 (Okla. 1920).

Opinion

HARRISON, J.

This suit was begun by Effie McMillan, as administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, Ben McMillan, and for herself and five minor children asking judgment against the Missouri, Oklahoma & Gulf Railway Company and its receivers for negligently causing the death of her husband, while engaged in unfastening an elevator bucket at the top of a coal chute.

The cause was tried upon the issues, first, whether the deceased, if found to be in the employment of defendants, came to his death by his own contributory negligence; second, whether he was in the employ of defendants or that of Arnold & Co., independent contractors, who were constructing the coal chute for the railway company.

The verdict of the jury was in favor of plaintiffs, against the railway company, for the sum of $21,780. Prom the-, judgment upon such verdict, the railway company appealed.

The assignment of errors contains 15 separate grounds for reversal. These may all be embodied in and disposed of under the following heads, to wit;

(1) Whether the court erred in instructing the jury.

(2) Whether the evidence supported the verdict of the jury.

(3) Whether the court erred by entering a judgment not in accord with the verdict.

(4) Whether the verdict was excessive.

On the first question, we have examined the court’s instructions, as well as those offered 'by the defendants and rejected by the court, and are of the opinion- that the court’s instructions upon the theory upon which the cause was tried were a fair and substantially correct statement of the law applicable to the facts in the case.

The cause was tried upon the theory that the railroad company was engaged in interstate commerce, and that if the deceased was in the employ of the railroad company and came to his death by the negligence of the railroad company, the damages, if any, should be awarded under the federal Employers’ Liability Act.

As to whether the work in which the deceased was engaged did in fact constitute interstate commerce, thereby bringing him within the federal Employers’ Liability Act, we are not called upon to decide, as that question is not made an issue here, nor was it made an issue in or decided by the trial court.

The cause seems to have been tried by mutual consent, upon the theory that if the railroad company was liable at all, it was liable as an interstate carrier.

The court instructed the jury as to the law applicable in such case, and we find no substantial error in the instructions given, nor in the refusal of the instructions offered by the railroad company.

As to the sufficiency of the evidence, three questions are to be determined:

(1.) Whether the evidence was sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that the deceased was in the employ of the railroad company, and not in that of the independent contractor. .

(2) Whether there was sufficient evidence to warrant the finding that deceased came to his death by the negligence of the railroad company, or whether by his own contributory negligence.

(3) Whether under all the evidence it is sufficient to sustain the verdict as modified.

On each of these questions the testimony was in direct conflict.

It is undisputed, however, that deceased was in the employment of the railroad company, and under its direction and control up to the very minute that he began work on the coal chute.

M. B. Nash, the round-house foreman, denied that he had ordered or directed the deceased to go up ion the coal chute, though he admitted that deceased was under his orders and control in and around the roundhouse and that he would have been discharged for any disobedience of his orders. He testified that Mr. Korten, the man who had had charge of the construction of the coal chute for the construction company, called to him, Nash, and asked him to send up a man to help dislodge the bucket at the top of the coal chute; that he told Joe McMillan, a brother of the deceased, to go up on the coal chute and help Joe Korten, the Arnold man, and repeated that, he told Joe-McMillan to help Joe Korten with the bucket, but did not tell Ben McMillan, the deceased, to go.

*72 Joe Horten testified that the deceased went up on the coal chute of his own accord, though he admitted that he asked Nash to send up a man to help him, and testified that Joe McMillan was the man who came in obedience to Nash’s orders; but Joe McMillan testified that Mr. Nash told him to go up and help Ben, the deceased, with the bucket, and Ed Davis testified that he heard Mr. Nash tell Ben to go up. Here was a direct conflict in testimony; Nash and Hor-ten testifying that Nash did not order the deceased to go up, and Joe McMillan and Ed Davis testifying that Nash did order deceased to go up.

The jury was the exclusive judge of the credibility of these witnesses, and gave credence to the testimony of Joe McMillan and Ed Davis, and under the law the jurors being the exclusive judges of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given their testimony, this court cannot say that they erred. And, if Joe McMillan and Ed Davis told the truth, then Ben McMillan, the deceased, was ordered by Nash to go up on the chute and help Horten. This being true, he went up there in obedience to the command and orders of the railroad company, through its round-house foreman, and in fulfillment of his obligations under his employment to obey the orders of such foreman; therefore he was in the employment of the railroad company, notwithstanding the fact that the coal chute had been constructed under an independent contract. The construction company, nor Joe Horten, the representative of such company, had any authority to command Ben McMillan or Joe McMillan, nor did either presume or exercise such authority. It had completed its independent contract and its men had quit work some time before, and Joe Horten had been recalled by the railroad company to repair a defect in the working of the coal bucket in which the coal was carried up through an open steel frame elevator and dumped into the coal chute. Under his testimony, and also the testimony of Mr. Nash, the round-house foreman, Horten did not assume to direct the round-house employes to help him, but, recognizing Nash’s authority to do so, called upon Nash to send help, and Nash said he sent the help in response to Horten’s request for it. Nash also testified that he required strict obedience to his orders and would fire an employe who refused to obey.

The circumstances were that a concrete coal house had been constructed upon trestles high enough above the ground that cars could pass under the coal house and load with coal. On the south side of the coal house the Arnold Construction Company had constructed a steel shaft or tower, operated by electricity, by means of which coal was elevated from the coal pit on the ground to the top of the coal chute, which ran at an angle of 45 degrees from the elevator shaft, down into the top of the coal house. The elevator shaft extended high enough above the top of the coal house .that when the coal bucket dumped, the coal was discharged in the top of the chute, extending from the elevator shaft into the top of the coal house.

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Bluebook (online)
191 P. 160, 79 Okla. 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-v-mcmillan-okla-1920.