Pollard v. Balon

6 S.E.2d 400, 61 Ga. App. 406, 1939 Ga. App. LEXIS 307
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedDecember 5, 1939
Docket27591.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 S.E.2d 400 (Pollard v. Balon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pollard v. Balon, 6 S.E.2d 400, 61 Ga. App. 406, 1939 Ga. App. LEXIS 307 (Ga. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Stephens, P. J.

S. J. Balón brought suit against H. D. Pollard as receiver of Central of Georgia Railway Company, alleging that the plaintiff was employed as a structural steel worker by Karl Koch Erecting Company, and was earning $72 per week; that on ■May 13, 1936, the defendant was in charge of and supervising and directing the unloading of several freight cars loaded with steel girders for delivery to the plaintiff’s employer, and that the defendant had a crane on a flat car on one of its tracks' adjacent to the track on which the freight cars loaded with girders were located; that the unloading of the cars was in eharge of one of the defendant’s employees who was the engineer of the crane; that the employer of the plaintiff supplied all labor necessary in unloading the girders except the engineer in charge of the operation of the crane and the fireman on the crane, the engineer and fireman being employees of the defendant; that neither the plaintiff nor his employer had any control over the operation of the crane, or the manner in which the girders should be removed, or the amount of the load which should be taken by the crane, and that the plaintiff did not know the loading capacity of the crane, but these matters should have been within the knowledge of the defendant; that the *408 plaintiff was instructed by the agent of the defendant in 'charge of operating the crane to hook the crane to two steel girders, and did so; that the engineer in charge of the crane began to lift the girders, and when the girders had been raised to a height of about six feet above the sides of the freight car in which they were loaded the boom on the crane suddenly buckled and bent and the girders and boom fell, striking the plaintiff, knocking him from the freight car onto another track of the defendant and severely and permanently injuring him; that the boom on the crane which was furnished and operated by the defendant was defective- and unsafe for the work it was intended to perform, in that the boom had a bend or buckle in it which rendered it incapable of supporting the load it otherAvise would support, and made the use of the crane hazardous, to those working about it; that before the accident the defendant had been notified by the plaintiff’s employer that the boom was defective and unsafe for use, and the defendant refused to place a neAv boom on the crane before it was put into operation; that the pláintiff had no knowledge of the defect in the boom and was not warned of it by the defendant; that the plaintiff received various injuries and incurred various expenses for their treatment; that the defendant was negligent in operating the crane with the defective boom and in attempting to lift the load of approximately 17,000 pounds with a boom that was bent and defective.

The defendant filed an ansAver in which it admitted, in answering paragraph 8 of the petition, that the employer of the plaintiff •supplied all labor necessary in unloading the steel girders, and denied the other allegations of the paragraph. Further answering the defendant alleged that it was agreed between the erecting company, the employer of the plaintiff, and the defendant, that the defendant would rent a crane with crane operator and fuel to the erecting company for $10 per - day for daily use in unloading ton loads of steel and equipment belonging to the erecting company; that in accordance with this agreement the defendant turned over to the erecting company its crane with operator and fuel to be used by the erecting company who began using the crane in unloading its steel on May 13, 1936; that at all times referred to in the petition the crane and operator Avere under the direction and exclusive control of one Karl Koch, an agent of the erecting com•pany, and the operator of the crane exercised no control or made *409 no movement except upon direction and instruction of Karl Koch; that if the plaintiff was injured it was by his own failure to exercise ordinary care for his own safety in working for his employer, and was not the result of any negligence of the defendant, he being injured by falling to the ground from the car in which he was working while attempting to climb over the side of the car when the boom pole broke as a result of the operation of the crane upon the order and under the direction of Karl Koch.

The plaintiff amended the petition by striking certain paragraphs (including paragraph 8) and adding other paragraphs in which he alleged that his employer notified the defendant that he would need a crane capable of moving steel that would weigh up to 25 tons, and contracted with the defendant to furnish a 25-ton capacity crane, and the defendant failed to furnish such crane, but furnished one that was not capable of handling 25 tons; that it was defective and. unsuitable for the purpose for which it was rented in that it was placed on a flat car instead of on a car with low trucks built specially for handling cranes, and in that it was hot equipped with outriggers, and did not have any grabs or holds to be fastened to the rails to keep the crane from tilting or tipping; that these facts were unknown to the plaintiff although known to the defendant; and that the defendant was negligent in failing to furnish the plaintiff’s employer a crane capable of handling 25 tons, in failing to furnish a crane on a specially built car that was heavy enough to hold the crane on the tracks and keep it from tilting, in failing to furnish a crane that was equipped with outriggers of sufficient weight to enable the crane to successfully move 25 tons, in furnishing a crane that was not equipped with grabs or hooks to be fastened to the rails, in failing to warn the plaintiff of the defective condition and character of the crane furnished by the defendant, and in that the operator of the crane, moved the crane with a load on it in a negligent manner, in that he swung the boom of the crane to the right with such speed that it caused the crane to dip or tilt, and then to stop the boom, suddenly causing the boom to break at the point where it was defective.

It was further alleged in the plaintiff’s second amendment that his employer contracted with the defendant to furnish to him, together with the crane and operator, a fireman and fuel for which the plaintiff’s employer agreed to pay the defendant $10 per day; *410

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 S.E.2d 400, 61 Ga. App. 406, 1939 Ga. App. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollard-v-balon-gactapp-1939.