Roberts v. Axe Tool Co.

148 S.E. 70, 107 W. Va. 236
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1929
DocketNo. 6269
StatusPublished

This text of 148 S.E. 70 (Roberts v. Axe Tool Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Axe Tool Co., 148 S.E. 70, 107 W. Va. 236 (W. Va. 1929).

Opinion

The defendant prosecutes this writ of error to a judgment against it for $12,000.00 entered upon a verdict of a jury in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff at the defendant's manufacturing plant in the city of Charleston on the 26th day of September, 1925. This is the second time this case has been before this Court for review. The first decision is reported in 104 W. Va. 425,140 S.E. 283.

As appears from the former decision, plaintiff was an employee of an independent contractor engaged in the erection of certain smokestacks through the roof of the shed which extended along the north side of one of the larger buildings of the defendant's plant.

The upper edge of the shed roof was attached to the side of the main building about nine feet below its eave. For a height of from four to five feet above the shed roof the side *Page 238 of the large building was constructed of metal sheeting without any openings in it. Above the sheeting, and extending up under the eaves for nearly, if not entirely, the length of the side of the building, there were contiguous glass windows in sashes 53 inches high. On the inside of the wall, slightly below the level of the window sills, there was a track or craneway on which was operated the northern end of a traveling crane. The other end of the crane moved on a runway on the opposite side of the building. The northern end of the crane extended to within about a foot of the siding and to within a few inches of the upright steel beams or columns which were just inside of the steel sheeting. Plaintiff was directed by his foreman to climb into one of the open windows and fasten one end of a guy rope, the other end of which was about to be fastened by another employee of the first section of the third of the series of six smokestacks which were being erected as above stated. In executing the order of his foreman, plaintiff climbed into the window, with the assistance of the foreman, and stood with one foot on the window sill and the other on the runway with his back to the western part of the building where he had observed the crane, while he undertook to fasten the end of the rope to a metal strut which ran along the side of the building above the window. Plaintiff did not assist in the erection of the first two stacks erected but he testifies that after he began work in connection with the erection of the third stack one of his fellow workmen told him that the stacks "had been guyed to a strut along near the upper edge of the window frame." It was reasonable for plaintiff to assume that this procedure was known to the defendant's employees. Before he had quite completed his task, the crane was moved along the runway from the plaintiff's rear and crushed him against one of the upright steel columns, injuring him very severely. Plaintiff says that when he first climbed in the window he looked to see the position of the crane and observed that it was about 15 feet away from him, and that the man who was in charge of the crane was about 25 feet from the rope controls on the crane, apparently watching some other men *Page 239 engaged at work at a forge; that the crane was not at that time being moved or used.

The principle of law on which the judgment was reversed and the verdict set aside when the case was formerly before us, as stated in the syllabus, was that the duty of reasonable care which a property owner owes to an invitee "does not extend to places beyond the invitation, and to which the invitee would not reasonably be expected to go." The facts then developed necessitated the application of that principle. The record did not show that the contractor had been given permission to use the track or the interior of the building near the track, nor that the defendant had been given notice that the contractor's workmen would use the track, or the part of the building where it was located; nor that the workmen had in fact used the track or the section of the building where it was located in such a notorious manner as to give the defendant notice of such use; nor was it manifest that such use was necessarily implied from the character of the work being performed. In that situation, it not appearing that there was any reason why the defendant's employees should have anticipated the presence of the plaintiff on the runway of the crane, it did not seem that there was any negligence on the part of the defendant in causing the movement of the crane which occasioned the plaintiff's injury.

On the re-trial of the case, however, there was developed substantial evidence which did not appear in the former record. Just as in the former record, it does not now appear that the contractor had been given formal permission to use the track or the interior of the building near the track, but it is brought into the present record that during the four or five days while the first two stacks were being erected and the riggings shifted, immediately prior to the day of the accident when the third stack was being erected, a number of the above mentioned windows along the top of the shed had been removed by the contractor's workmen and that guy ropes had been extended through the windows and tied to the frame of the building on the inside, and that one or more of the contractor's workmen had stood with one foot on the craneway while engaged in tying these ropes. This evidence, it is *Page 240 true, is not without contradiction, but it appears affirmatively in the testimony of unimpeached witnesses of the plaintiff and has back of it now the sanction of a jury verdict. This new evidence appears in part in the testimony of one Massey, who was foreman for the contractor in the erection of the stacks numbers 1 and 2, but who was not a witness on the former trial. It is undisputed that if the operator of the crane had looked in the direction of the plaintiff before the crane was started on its movement toward him the presence of the plaintiff in his position of danger could have been observed. The view was unobstructed. Was there negligence on the part of the operator in not taking this precaution? On the record as it stood at the time of the former review, we held that negligence had not been proved; that there was no disclosure of facts which brought it to the attention of the defendant's employees that the plaintiff or his fellow workmen might be expected to be inside of the building on or near the runway of the crane; but on the present review we are constrained to hold that the facts developed at the last trial are sufficient to create a question for jury determination as to whether the defendant was guilty of negligence in the operation of the crane under the circumstances proven. The operator of the crane admits that he knew that the erection crew of the contractor was engaged in placing the smokestacks in position. He "saw them working around there;" "saw them out there." Necessarily a large portion of their work was being performed on the roof of the shed. This was just outside the windows from the runway of the crane on the north side of the building. There not appearing any reason why full credence should not be given to the testimony adduced by the plaintiff as to the removal of the windows, the tying of guy ropes inside of the windows and the presence of workmen in the proximity of the runway in fastening the ropes, all prior to the day of the plaintiff's injury, that evidence, in the light of the jury verdict, for the purposes of the present inquiry, must be taken as true. Defendant's officers and employees could not close their eyes to these facts. The removal of the windows (a fact undenied by the defense) should alone have put defendant's employees

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 S.E. 70, 107 W. Va. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-axe-tool-co-wva-1929.