Ryan v. Oakland Gas, Light & Heat Co.

130 P. 693, 21 Cal. App. 14, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 224
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 13, 1913
DocketCiv. No. 999.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 130 P. 693 (Ryan v. Oakland Gas, Light & Heat 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
Ryan v. Oakland Gas, Light & Heat Co., 130 P. 693, 21 Cal. App. 14, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 224 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

The complaint in this case was filed in December, 1904, and was brought to issue by answer in October, 1905. On appeal from the judgment at the first trial it was held that the evidence was sufficient to support the verdict in favor of plaintiff but the judgment was reversed because of an instruction which, in the opinion of the appellate court, took from the jury a question of fact. Ryan v. Oakland Gas etc. Co., 10 Cal. App. 484, [102 Pac. 558],)

*16 Respondent contends that, so far as the facts are concerned, the decision on the first appeal is the law of the case, inasmuch as the evidence is substantially the same—indeed, differs only in the fact that some additional testimony favorable to plaintiff was introduced. It would occupy about as much time and space to determine whether or not respondent’s contention is sound as it would to determine the facts for ourselves ; therefore, we shall not accept the law of the case upon the facts as having been established.

Plaintiff brings the action to recover damages for personal injury while at work as a laborer digging a trench for defendant in the streets of Oakland. The injury complained of occurred July 5, 1904.

Paragraph IV of the complaint is as follows: “That the said excavation and construction of said trench, at said time and place, was dangerous to the life, body and limbs of plaintiff, while employed as aforesaid, unless the walls and banks of said trench were braced and secured from falling or caving in on plaintiff while standing in said trench, and engaged in his said employment as aforesáid; that said danger consisted in the liability that the walls and banks might fall and cave in on plaintiff while working in said trench, because of the character of the soil, as hereinafter stated; that said danger to plaintiff, while working and employed as aforesaid, unless said walls and banks were braced and secured as aforesaid was at all times known and familiar to said defendant and its said superintendent and vice-principal; but that despite said knowledge of said danger to plaintiff, while working and employed as aforesaid, said defendant and its said superintendent and vice-principal did not brace, or in any way secure, said walls and banks from falling upon, or caving in on plaintiff while engaged in said trench as aforesaid; but on the contrary, willfully, knowingly and carelessly failed and neglected to brace, or in any way secure, said walls and banks from falling or caving in on plaintiff while working as aforesaid; that had said wall been braced and secured as aforesaid, the injuries to plaintiff hereinafter alleged, could, and would not have happened.”

Then follow averments particularizing at considerable length the character of the work plaintiff was doing, his inexperience in similar situations, the circumstances attending the *17 accident, the character of the soil and its liability to cave, plaintiff’s ignorance of the danger, defendant’s failure to provide against the injury that befell plaintiff by carelessly and negligently failing to brace the walls of said trench to prevent their caving in and in failing to inform plaintiff of the dangerous character of his said work, by reason of which plaintiff “was violently jammed and pinned by said falling wall against the opposite wall of said trench, and suffered great bodily hurt and injury by the fracture in two places of the pelvis bone.”

Paragraph VII is as follows: “By reason of said injury, received through the negligence and carelessness of defendant, as aforesaid, said plaintiff has been ever since said time sick, sore, lame, prostrated and rendered incapacitated from performing any labor, and from attending to any kind of business or duty whatever, and has undergone great physical suffering and agony, and will continue lame and incapacitated from performing any labor for the rest of his life.”

The answer is a specific denial of most of plaintiff’s averments except as to the fact that he was injured while working for defendant.

As a separate defense it is alleged that plaintiff and his fellow employees working in said trench were at all times cautioned to brace the walls and that defendant furnished lumber and materials for that purpose; that it was part of plaintiff ?s duty to prevent the walls of said trench from falling by bracing the same, of which plaintiff was fully aware,, and that the accident resulted from plaintiff’s neglect in this regard and that he voluntarily assumed all risk. It is also alleged that the injury to plaintiff was not the result of the earth falling on him but of his struggle “to free himself without the assistance of his fellow-employees although cautioned by them to allow them to assist him and extricate him from the soil.”

It developed at the trial that the walls of this trench were weakened by another parallel trench which had the year before been dug alongside and near to the trench in question which defendant well knew and of which plaintiff was ignorant and that this fact contributed to the accident. An amendment to the complaint was allowed to conform to these *18 facts. An answer was also filed denying the averments of the amendment.

Plaintiff was employed by defendant in digging a trench which defendant was sinking, in Oakland, for the purpose of laying its pipes. The ditch began near First Street, came up Brush tg Second, then easterly on Second to Grove Street, thence southerly on Grove. On Brush and Second streets the ditch was braced, and on Saturday, July 2, 1904, the ditch on Grove Street had been run about thirty or forty feet. It was between four and five feet deep and about three and one-half feet wide: The men ceased work Saturday afternoon, the third was Sunday and Monday, the fourth, was a holiday; they resumed work on Tuesday morning. After the men had been working about two hours, the eastern bank of the ditch gave way, catching plaintiff who was working in the trench. This ditch was parallel to a wall surrounding the defendant’s property, about three feet away. A year or more prior to digging the trench a ditch had been dug between it and the wall parallel thereto for the purpose of laying a gas pipe about two inches in diameter. Kirk was superintendent of the company; “did the employing and discharging of men and directed the work generally when present.” Welling was foreman and, in Kirk’s absence, “directed and discharged the men.” Welling testified: “There was a carpenter employed by the company at that time. His name was Dillon. His work was to do such carpenter work as might be necessary in bracing up and timbering the ditch that should be braced. As a matter of fact this ditch on Grove Street where Ryan was hurt was not timbered up or braced. We timbered all the ditch on Second Street as we came along Second Street for two blocks.” Dillon testified: “This ditch that was being constructed from Brush Street up to Grove and down Grove Street, in 1904, I braced it, or cribbed it, to keep it from caving. I know there was an accident July 5, 1904. I came up there that morning. I did some work there that morning. I went there to see if they wanted any more bracing put in. I saw Mr. Kirk and Mr. Welling, I think, was there. I asked Mr. Welling if he wanted any more- bracing done, and he said he did not think it was necessary. I don’t think there was any lumber there that morning to do the cribbing. After Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 P. 693, 21 Cal. App. 14, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-v-oakland-gas-light-heat-co-calctapp-1913.