Pre v. Standard Portland Cement Co.

100 P. 122, 9 Cal. App. 591, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 80
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 1908
DocketCiv. No. 326.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 100 P. 122 (Pre v. Standard Portland Cement Co.) 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
Pre v. Standard Portland Cement Co., 100 P. 122, 9 Cal. App. 591, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 80 (Cal. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Action for personal injury.

It is alleged in the amended complaint that defendant is operating a cement plant known as the Portland Cement Works, Napa City; that prior to September 14, 1904, plaintiff entered the employment of defendant as a laborer at said works; that at the time of the injury complained of defendant was maintaining a room or house at its said plant, in which it stored ingredients used in manufacturing cement, commonly called “clinkers”; that such material was there stored in large quantities, forming a pile of considerable height; that after being stored in said room, said clinkers became heated to such extent as to severely burn any person on whom they might fall; that said room was so constructed that said clinkers, as they might be desired for use, could be caused to fall from such pile through holes which could be opened along one side of the floor of said room, into a shaft or conveyor below; that said clinkers, after being so stored, became slacked and “thereby became and were likely to run or slide, and when such holes were opened and such materials were thereby withdrawn from said room, the said materials which lay immediately above said holes would quickly run through said holes, and thereby would and did leave a high bank from said holes on said floor to the top of said pile of clinkers, and frequently, when a quantity of said clinkers had been so withdrawn, no inore thereof would run down said slope or bank”; that defendant “did not provide any machinery or appliance for the purpose of starting the remainder thereof to run into said holes, but would and did direct its employees to go into said room in the trough or vacant space from which such clinkers had been drawn or run off, and shovel said clinkers from said bank into said holes. That such bank was likely at any time to cave in and start to run, and frequently did cave and start to run down from said bank to the vacant space from which such materials had been withdrawn, and *594 would and frequently did fill up said vacant space where said employees were directed to go with said clinkers from such hank, and thereby cover such employees with said heated clinkers.” It is then averred “that defendant well knew about said matters hereinabove mentioned and said place was not a good) safe or secure place to work in; and said defendant, well knowing the need thereof, did not provide therein a good, safe or secure place to work in, nor good, safe or secure materials or appliances to work with therein”; that, knowing said facts, defendant “directed plaintiff to go into said room or house at said plant' or works and to proceed to shovel said clinkers and cause the same to run into said holes. That' defendant did not inform plaintiff that said work was in any respect dangerous, and wholly failed and neglected to warn plaintiff of or concerning such or any danger therefrom, and wholly failed and neglected to furnish or supply plaintiff with a good, safe or secure place in which to do such work, or with a good, safe or secure tool or appliance with which to do such work. . . . That defendant well knew that plaintiff was wholly ignorant of any danger therefrom and without fault on his part, and while in said employ and engaged in said work so assigned to him by defendant and as directed by defendant, for want of due care and attention on its part, the pile of clinkers caved or slid from the bank thereof, by and through the carelessness .and negligence of said defendant, and plaintiff was thereby thrown down and buried by the caving of said burning and hot clinkers, and was thereby burned, crushed and bruised, and received serious injury therefrom.”

A general demurrer was overruled and defendant' answered, denying specifically the averments of the complaint. For a separate answer it is averred: That at the time the plaintiff received the injury complained of he was at work causing a pile of clinkers t'o run through certain holes, there to be carried away by a belt passing underneath said holes; that plaintiff had been engaged in said work for some months and had been instructed by defendant how to perform said labor; that plaintiff was employed “to cause said clinkers t’o pass through said holes, and in so doing it was necessary that said clinkers either be shoveled into said hole or that said clinkers be caused to cave down from the bank on the side of said hole”; that plaintiff knew that said bank of clinkers “must cave or *595 run down in order that he perform the services required of him and which he had agreed to render”; that he knew that said clinkers were hot and would burn him if they came in contact wit'h his person; that he knew each and every danger connected with his said employment, and thereby assumed all and every risk incident to his said employment; that plaintiff: was, at the time he received the injuries complained of, guilty of contributory negligence which was the direct and proximate cause of the injuries received by him.

Resort to the uncontradicted testimony will make' somewhat clearer the facts essential to a right understanding of the circumstances connected with the accident. The original materials of which clinkers are composed, and from which cement is made, are lime and clay—about sixty-two and one-half per cent lime. The raw material is first ground in a crusher, then run into, what is called a ball mill, where it is ground into particles of the size of a mustard seed; thence it goes into what is called a tube mill and crushed into not quite the fineness of flour; next it goes into the kilns and is burned; thence it is run out on a platform and piled up and is put' through the simple process of being wet; there is next to the outside platform or pile of clinkers a clinker building; the material comes from the kilns on a carrying belt', which runs over the clinker pile and, by means of a trip, drops its load at the piles; here water is put upon the material and it remains for a week or ten days to “slack and age,” the process causing heat “enough to bum anybody.” During the slacking process there is heat upon the surface of the pile while the interior is slacking, but does not stay upon the surface very long, and when about ready to be moved “the heat' that is on the interior of the" pile cannot be seen or felt upon the outside . . . but down about six inches it is hot enough, down from six t'o twelve inches.” Underneath this pile of clinkers and underneath the clinker building runs a belt upon which the clinkers were dropped through holes or slots in the floor of the platform and clinker building, the holes opening along the side of the piles. These holes occurred at intervals of about thirteen feet, and were about twelve or thirteen inches square, of which there were ten and were ■ numbered 1, 2, 3 and so on. The clinkers were let down through these slots in succession, commencing with No. 1, the oldest material being over this slot where the carrying belt dumps first. The *596 material is first let down by a man underneath the opening who takes out the slide. “After the man gets through underneath, when this hole is empty, we put a man in there and he pokes it down with a bar. When the incline of the funnel (which forms by the material running out) is so great that it won’t come down a man pokes it down with a bar or shovel.” When the material would not run through by gravity it became necessary to send men to the clinker pile and work it ‘down to and through the slots.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 P. 122, 9 Cal. App. 591, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pre-v-standard-portland-cement-co-calctapp-1908.