Selden-Breck Const. Co. v. Linnett

1913 OK 390, 134 P. 956, 38 Okla. 704, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 428
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 10, 1913
Docket2596
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1913 OK 390 (Selden-Breck Const. Co. v. Linnett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Selden-Breck Const. Co. v. Linnett, 1913 OK 390, 134 P. 956, 38 Okla. 704, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 428 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

*705 TURNER, J.

On January 18, 1910, the defendant in error, Anna B. Linnett, sued the Huckins Hotel & Office Building Company, Selden-Breck Construction Company, and the Reinforced Concrete Construction Company, in the superior court of Oklahoma county, in damages for personal injuries sustained by her husband, which resulted in his death. Her petition, after alleging that on August 7, 1909, deceased, Paul H. Linnett, was an employee of the two construction companies, plaintiffs in error, while erecting a hotel and office building in Oklahoma City for said Huckins Hotel & Office Building Company, substantially states that defendants, for use in said building while so doing, erected temporary elevators, and used them for the purpose of transporting material and laborers from the ground floor to the upper floor of said building, which was ten stories high when completed; that the same were run at great speed, and that it was necessary for the protection of life and property that the same be done with great care; that while so employed it was the duty of deceased to assist in transporting material to the elevator on the ground floor, and to take it from the elevator on the upper floor, and in addition thereto to do such other work in connection with mixing, transporting, and placing concrete as he was directed to do by defendants; that the superintendent and various employees of defendants, including deceased, rode said elevator 'while engaged in such work, with the knowledge and consent of defendants, in going to and from their work on the upper floors; “that the elevator so used by the said Paul H. Linnett was defectively constructed, in that it was not sufficiently strong to carry the weight of a man or men and the loaded wheelbarrows, which it was used to transport from the lower floor to the upper floors and •from the upper floors to the lower floor; further, that the said elevator was constructed of ordinary 2x4 timbers, and that the slide or guide on which the elevator worked up and down was a 2x4 piece of scantling, and when the ■ elevator *706 was heavily loaded, the said 2x4 scantling would spring, and did spring so as to permit the slides of the pieces on the elevator which held said elevator in its proper place to slip from its slide or guide,, and in doing so to tilt or topple over”; that on the day aforesaid, after deceased and another employee had finished work upon the upper floor, they took the elevator to go to the lower floor; that after descending some distance said elevator slipped from its slide or guide, swung out of place, titled over, and threw deceased therefrom to the lower floor, killing him instantly; that said elevator was the only, means of passing from the upper to the lower floor, except a ladder constructed on the outside of the building, dangerous to climb; that deceased at the time of his injury was exercising ordinary care, and that the accident which caused his death “was due solely to the negligence of the said defendants in the defective and negligent construction and maintenance and negligent and careless operation of said elevator,” wherefore she prayed damages in a sum certain. Thereafter the cause was dismissed as to the Hotel Company.

Plaintiffs in error, here called defendants, after pleading a general denial and assumption of risks, contributory negligence, and that deceased was a fellow servant to the servant, if any, causing the injury, admitted their corporate existence, and alleged “that Linnett at no time had any right to be on the elevator, it having been constructed and at all times operated and maintained solely for the use >and purpose of transporting freight and material from and to the various floors of the building, and that the defendants long before the accident had promulgated rules forbidding the use of the elevator for the transportation of employees, or other persons, and that these rules were in force at the time of the accident, and that the said Linnett had full knowledge at all times thereof; that in addition thereto there were large signs on the elevators warning all persons against riding thereon, and advising them that its use for the transportation of persons was dangerous, and that all of the risks in connec *707 tion with the use of the elevator for the transportation of passengers were perfectly obvious and well known to Linnett at and before the time he endeavored, to use it at the time he was killed, and that in going on the elevator Linnett was a volunteer, acting in direct violation of the rules and warnings aforesaid, and in utter disregard of the knowledge above intimated, and that he thereby -assumed the risks' of all- the dangers in connection with endeavoring to use the elevator as aforesaid, wherefore he could not recover.” After reply filed, in effect a general denial, there was trial to a jury and judgment for plaintiff for $5,000, and defendants bring the case here.

It is assigned that the evidence was insufficient to take the case to the jury on the question of negligence, and hence that the court erred in overruling defendants’ demurrer thereto. Resolving all material controverted questions of. fact in favor of plaintiff, on this point the evidence -tends to prove: That on the day of the injury deceased was an employee of the defendant the Concrete Company, which, with the defendant the Construction Company, was erecting a ten-story hotel building in Oklahoma City. That the concrete work thereon was about completed. That in the court of the building was an elevator, or rather two of them, operating side by side, and alternating up and down, each constructed of 2x4 timbers, consisting substantially of a floor about ' 4%x6 feet, supporting a framework called a “cage,” which was held in place so as .to prevent lateral motion 'by a track made -of 2x4’s, over which ran U-shaped iron champs, fastened, one at the 'top and bottom on each side of the “cage.” That the elevator was “hung on the center,” and was raised aid lowered by cable connected with an engine on the first floor, aided by a' boy called “Pussy,” stationed perhaps on the tenth floor, who gave certain signals to the engineer to warn him when men were descending ''on it. That the elevator was originally intended to' carry freight only. ' That at the bottom of the elevator shaft was a - sign which read: “Danger. Keep Off. *708 Persons Riding This Hoist Do So At Their Own Risk.” That notwithstanding this and the instruction of the construction company to its foremen to warn the employees to keep off of it, both foremen and employees habitually rode.up and down upon it, with the knowledge of defendants, instead of using the ladders provided for ascending and descending, which were on the inside of the building. The evidence further discloses that about 11 o’clock on that day deceased and a fellow employee were ordered to go from the first to the tenth floor and fill some holes with concrete; that they did so, the fellow workman preceding deceased, each ascending on the elevator with a barrow of concrete and a shovel; that after completing said work they placed their wheelbarrows and shovels on the elevator on that floor, and started to descend in the cage, both standing to one side near the edge of the platform; that while descending thus the U-shaped clamps on the bottom of the “cage” released their hold, and the elevator “jumped the track,” or “slipped out of its guides,” the platform tipped halfway over, and they were hurled out and plaintiff’s intestate killed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 390, 134 P. 956, 38 Okla. 704, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/selden-breck-const-co-v-linnett-okla-1913.