Porterfield v. City of Modesto

159 P. 205, 30 Cal. App. 598, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 124
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 1916
DocketCiv. No. 1512.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 159 P. 205 (Porterfield v. City of Modesto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porterfield v. City of Modesto, 159 P. 205, 30 Cal. App. 598, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 124 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

*599 CHIPMAN, P. J.

This is an action brought by plaintiffs, Estella and Agnes Porterfield, to recover damages for the death of Charles Porterfield, the husband and father, respectively, of plaintiffs. Porterfield’s death resulted from injuries received while working as a laborer in a sewer trench being constructed by the city of Modesto. The councilmen of the city were made parties defendant, but, by consent of plaintiffs’ counsel, the court instructed the jury that if they found for the plaintiffs the verdict should be against the city of Modesto only. The case was tried by the superior court with a jury, and a verdict was rendered in favor of plaintiffs for the sum of seven thousand five hundred dollars. Based upon the verdict, a judgment was entered for said sum in favor of plaintiffs, from which defendant has appealed under the alternative method.

The record is singularly free from any claim of errors of the court in conducting the trial. The instructions were clear and succinct statements of the law necessary for the guidance of the jury and are in nowise challenged. The nature and extent of the grounds for the appeal will be found in the following statement in defendant’s brief: “The theory of the defense at the trial of said action and on this appeal is that the injuries received by said Charles Porterfield, and which resulted in his death, were received not in the line of his duty, but were caused by his gross carelessness in disobeying the orders of his superior, G. H. Freitas (city engineer in charge of the work); and also that the verdict is contrary to the evidence, for the reason that there was an utter failure on the part of the plaintiffs to establish the negligence alleged in the complaint.” In short, the defense was contributory negligence by the deceased.

It was alleged in the complaint that the said construction work was in charge of said engineer, Freitas, pursuant to the resolution of defendant; that, on October 9, 1913, a portion of the excavation or trench for the sewer pipe had been opened up for some distance and the sewer pipe laid therein and the trench ordered by the city to be closed; that the soil through which the trench was dug was of such nature that to prevent its caving and falling upon laborers working in the trench it was necessary that the sides of the trench should be secured by cribbing, in the absence of which it was a dangerous and unsafe place to work, a fact well known to defendants; that, *600 notwithstanding such fact and such knowledge by defendants, Porterfield was ordered by defendants to go into the trench and shovel dirt around a manhole being therein constructed; that the bracings or cribbing at the place where Porterfield was directed to work had previously been removed, thus leaving the walls of the trench without support and liable to cave in and fall upon him when he was at work; that it was unnecessary to send him into the trench for the purpose above stated for the reason that, as had elsewhere been done in filling the trench, earth which had been thrown out of the trench and lying along' the sides at the top could have been used for the purpose of filling around the manhole; “that while the said Charles Porterfield was carrying out the instructions of the defendants, and was in said trench for the purpose of shoveling said dirt around said manhole, the said bank of said ditch caved in and upon the said Charles Porter-field and crushed his head, and the said Charles Porterfield did, on the 10th day of October, 1913, die as a result of said injury ’ ’; that defendant did not provide said Porterfield a reasonably safe place in which to work, ‘ ‘ in that said defendant did not keep said ditch cribbed and braced. That said defendant sent said Charles Porterfield into a place unsafe to work in with full knowledge of the dangerous condition of said place.” With much amplification the complaint sets forth the facts of which the foregoing is a brief summary.

The testimony was that the trench had been closed up to a point near to and east of the manhole, and had also been filled west of the manhole within about six or seven feet of the top. The manhole was in course of construction and was completed to a point a few feet from the top. The following description of the manner in which the work was done is taken from respondents’ brief and is in accordance with the testimony:

“According to the testimony of all the witnesses the soil in the city of Modesto where the sewer was being constructed had on top a strata of hard material, and underlying this was loose running sand. The cave-in was on F street, between Fifth and Sixth streets. As the excavation was opened up cribbing was placed in the excavation to keep the ground from caving in. The first row of cribbing extended down ten feet and was composed of upright boards placed on both sides of the excavation and held apart by jacks. The second row of cribbing extended down the rest of the distance and was *601 constructed for the same purpose and in the same manner as the first row of cribbing. Always, prior to the death of Porterfield, it was customary for the excavation to be filled before removing the cribbing. The filling-in was done in the following manner: Dirt was filled in until it reached the first row of jacks, then the lowest row of jacks was removed and dirt filled up to second row of jacks, which were then taken out and the filling-in progressed as before until the excavation had been filled up to the top of the lower row of cribbing. Then the lower row of cribbing was pulled out by means of chains and jack screws, the upper row of cribbing still remaining in place. The lower row of jacks on the upper row of cribbing was then removed, and the filling progressed as before, each row of jacks being removed as the dirt in the excavation was filled until the whole excavation was filled. Thereupon the upper row of cribbing was removed by pulling out the upright boards with chain and jack.

“When Porterfield was killed the cribbing had all been removed but the excavation had not been filled up, and the workmen had placed cribbing at one point only in the excavation and that was right at the manhole, the excavation being cribbed for the distance of six feet directly opposite the place where the manhole was being constructed. The banks of the excavation west of the manhole had cracked but had not fallen into the excavation. The engineer in charge of the work knew of this fact. Always, prior to the time Porter-field was killed, the excavation had been filled from the top and at the time Porterfield was killed there was plenty of dirt on top of the ground and adjacent to the excavation to fill up the excavation. This dirt was the same dirt that had come from the excavation. Engineer Freitas was in charge of the work for the city of Modesto. The sewer pipe had been laid in the trench and a manhole was being constructed. The manhole was being constructed with brick and was circular in form. As the masons laid the brick it was necessary to fill in dirt around the manhole to give the masons a place to stand on.”

The following statement of respondents’ counsel presents the only controverted question of importance in the case: “Some jacks and timbers had been left in the excavation around and near the manhole and Engineer Freitas told Porterfield to go down into the trench and throw out the *602

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Bluebook (online)
159 P. 205, 30 Cal. App. 598, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porterfield-v-city-of-modesto-calctapp-1916.