Selzer v. Ohio & Pennsylvania Coal Co.

12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 787
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJuly 1, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 787 (Selzer v. Ohio & Pennsylvania Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Selzer v. Ohio & Pennsylvania Coal Co., 12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 787 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Marvin, J.

The case of the Ohio & Pennsylvania Coal Company against Selzer, administrator ot the estate of Peter Woli, deceased, is brought here upon [788]*788petition in error to reverse the judgment of the court of common pleas' :of this county. Suit was brought by the administrator, Selzer, against this plaintiff in error, The Ohio &. Pennsylvania Coal Company and. two natural persons, but dismissed by the plaintiff as to the two natural persons,. whose names I do not recollect, and prosecuted against the corporation; if not dismissed, abandoned as to the two. The trial in 'the court of common pleas resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff below, and it is to reverse that judgment that this proceeding is i prosecuted in this court.

The petition, the amended petition, on which the case was tried, ■sets out in substance that Peter Wolf was employed by this plaintitf in error as one oí a gang of men to load coal from the docks of the coal company, upon vessels in this harbor, and that while so employed on September 19, if I remember rightly, perhaps 1890, he was killed. That his death was caused, the petition says, by reason of the negligence of the plaintiff in error, the defendant in the court below, without any negligence or fault on the part of the decedent.

It seems that in the work of loading coal upon the vessel, among the devices employed are large buckets holding some of them a ton and some of them a ton and a half of coal, or thereabouts; and then a derrick and hoist operated by steam; and when the buckets are filled they are hoisted by this device, derrick, and swung around to the proper place and dumped into the vessel. The buckets have bails fastened to lugs on the side of the buckets, that is to say, they pass over those and are held to their place, they lift the buckets, the bails, by reason of being placed over these lugs; and the buckets are constructed with a rim about the top, and that rim has in it an opening place for a latch to catch in, which by proper mechanism is arranged to fall in or get into this slot or opening. There is a spring which operates against this latch or clutch, that certainly is for the purpose of getting the clutch into the slot or opening in the rim of the bucket, and it is claimed by the defendant in error, that the spring is for the purpose of holding in place the clutch or latch when it has got into the opening on a rim of the bucket designed lor it. I don’t know that it is denied by anybody that a part of the purpose of that spring is to hold the latch or clutch in place alter it is gotten into the proper place. The petition sets out that the sole cause of the accident was because of the detective condition of the bucket, the bail, and the spring, perhaps the latch; with quite a good deal of stress it was urged in argument, and indeed in the evidence seems to have been the chief matter in contention as to just what the purpose of the spring was, how far the purpose of the spring was to hold this latch or clutch into position and as to whether that spring was a suitable one at the time that this accident happened. The facts seem to be that the bucket was loaded with coal, raised by the steam apparatus up the proper distance so as to swing out over the vessel, and it should have remained in that position until it had got out of the place where it was desired 1o overset it, when there was a device by which a man employed for that purpose could pull a rope or cord, throw the clutch out of its position in which it held the bail up, keep the bucket in an upright position, and then the bucket, by reason of the fact that the bails are below the center of gravity, after the bucket is full the bucket would overset. This bucket did not hold its position until it had [789]*789reached the place where it would have been overset by the pulling ot the cord, but did overset and throw out the coal belore it was designed that it should. The decedent was at work under the place where the coal tell, and was killed.

Among other things that is claimed in the petition in error, apiong other errors claimed, is that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence, and is contrary to the evidence.

Upon that point we are not prepared to say; we do not say that this case would be reversed because of the fact that there was not sufficient evidence to show that the spring was weak, and too weak to hold the bail, or to hold the bucket in the proper relative position to the bail, although some of us at least have some doubts as to whether the evidence would sustain the verdict; but we are not prepared to say that the judgment should be reversed on that ground.

A considerable amount of evidence was introduced on the part of the defendant in error, a good many questions were asked on the part of the defendant in error, which were allowed to be answered by the court in the trial of the cause, which are claimed by the plaintiff in error to have been to its prejudice, and to have been improperly allowed to be answered.

A man by the name of Adolph Hagan was a witness placed on the stand by the defendant in error, who had worked on the dock for seven or eight years, and beyond that, so far as anything is disclosed in the bill, had no special means of being able to ju^ge of whether devices that were there used were proper or not. On page 27 of the bill of exceptions that witness was asked this question: “Mr. Hagan, you can describe that spring. Tell us how the spring was,” speaking of this spring that works against the clutch or latch that should be in a slot or opening in the rim of the bucket so as to hold the bucket and bail in the proper relative position. Objection was made to that question; that objection was overruled. The witness answered, “That spring was so light that it couldn’t hold the bucket, and that is the reason that it dumped.” The defendant below moved to strike that answer out, to take that from the jury. That was overruled by the court and an exception is taken to that. Without saying whether this case should be reversed for that and like questions, some of us at least, and I don’t know but the entire court think it is very doubtful whether that answer should have been permitted to stand. The witness answered more than he was inquired of, first, saying that the spring was so light that it couldn’t hold the bucket, and then he added, “and that is the reason that it dumped,” certainly assuming to have knowledge, I think, expert knowledge, as to why the bucket dumped. And, as I said, without saying that we would reverse for that, we think it very questionable whether the court ought not to have taken from the jury at least that much of the answer “and that i's the reason that it dumped,” if not the entire answer.

On page 163 of the bill of exceptions, Mr. Zerbe, the president of the coal company, was put upon the stand by the defendant below. He testified, upon questions being put to him as to the way in which the men were employed on the dock of the coal company, that they worked for different parties on the dock; worked on the dock of this company when there was work for them by this company, work to do, and then was asked, as is found on page 163 of the bill of exceptions, this question, having said that the men received eleven cents, it I remember [790]

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ohio Cir. Dec. 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/selzer-v-ohio-pennsylvania-coal-co-ohiocirct-1895.