Sroufe v. Moran Bros. Co.

68 P. 896, 28 Wash. 381, 1902 Wash. LEXIS 497
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1902
DocketNo. 4148
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 68 P. 896 (Sroufe v. Moran Bros. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sroufe v. Moran Bros. Co., 68 P. 896, 28 Wash. 381, 1902 Wash. LEXIS 497 (Wash. 1902).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

White, J.

— This is an appeal from a judgment ren- - dared by the superior court of King county on the verdict •of a.jury in favor of the respondents and\ against the ap[383]*383pellant for the sum of $6,500 and. costs. The action is by the minor children of one TIenry 0. Sroufe, deceased, to recover damages for the death of their father, occasioned •by accidental injuries received while in the employ of the appellant as a ship carpenter. Omitting formal allegations, the material allegations of the complaint are, in substance, that while so employed as a ship carpenter the said TIenry C. Sroufe was directed by the vice principal of the defendant, the shipyard foreman, to go upon a high .scaffolding which the defendant had erected on said yard, and surrounding a vessel in the course of construction, ■and there assist in putting in place the cant timbers which the defendant was about to attempt to raise; that said cant frames or timbers were heavy wooden frames, or ship ribs, which were required to- bo adjusted to the keel of said vessel and a supporting harping near the top of said cant; that, to so adjust the cant, it was necessary first to hoist it, .and then lower it gradually to a proper place of adjustment, and for the purpose of hoisting and lowering it. in place, so that it could be adjusted and fastened, defendant provided an engine located near the stem of the vessel, ■and also blocks with tackle and rope running to a temporary derrick or gin pole situated near the cant, which was :a.t the stern of the vessel, which rope was fastened to the cant, and also provided jackscrews, resting upon blocks laid on cross timbers or spales for use underneath, or at the lower end of the cant; that it was the duty of Henry 0. 'Sroufe, under directions to him from the yard foreman, ■to stand and remain upon the scaffolding aforesaid (it being about thirty feet in height) while the cant was being hoisted and lowered, to assist in the work, and keep the cant in place until it could he fastened; that in attempting to hoist and .adjust the first cant, which was a very heavy [384]*384one, and to fasten same near the stern of the vessel, it had been hoisted into the air, and was hanging suspended by means of the ropes fastened as aforesaid, and on a jack-screw resting on planks laid across the spales beneath the-lower end, and while the same was thus suspended and hanging and being lowered to its proper place, and while-Henry 0. Sroufe was on said scaffolding, and in the performance of his duties, and itnder the direction of the foreman aforesaid, and in the exercise of due and proper care, and without any negligence whatever on the part of said Henry 0. Sroufe, the rope and said tackle slipped or gave way, and the spales and cross planks and the jackscrewssprung or gave way, whereby and by reason, thereof the-heavy cant fell against the staging upon which Henry 0. Sroufe was standing, with, such rapidity and violence that it knocked the same down, and precipitated the deceased some thirty feet to the deck below, with such force that he was fatally injured, and from such injuries, and as a result thereof, shortly thereafter died; that the falling of the-cant, and the consequent killing of the deceased, were on-account of the negligence of the defendant and its foreman, in that the foreman failed and neglected to provide and furnish the deceased with a safe place in which to work or to discharge his duties, and failed and neglected to- provide suitable, proper, sufficient, adequate, or serviceable ropes, tackle, instrumentalities, and appliances, and to adjust or arrange the same in a suitable-, proper, and safe manner, so-that the same would work properly and safely, and failed and neglected to properly strengthen or to provide suitable spales, timbers, or staging underneath the jackscrews for the raising, catching, holding, or bearing of the weight necessary to rest upon the j ackserews in the process of lowering the cant, and said foreman employed by the defendant was negligent and careless in constructing, arranging,. [385]*385managing, and operating the ropes, tackle, instrumentalities, and appliances as aforesaid, and the defective, unsuitable, and inadequate apparatus, and the negligent and careless management and operation thereof, and the manner of attaching and adjusting the same, as provided, furnished, and operated by the defendant and its foreman, rendered the same inadequate, unsuitable, unsafe, and dang'erous, and rendered tire place provided for deceased in which to work a dangerous and unsafe place to work, all of which facts were known to defendant and its foreman, and were unknown to deceased at the time of the accident or at all; that said accident occurred while the deceased was in the discharge of his duties under the direction of the foreman of said defendant, and while the deceased was in the exercise of due and proper care, and without negligence or notice of any of the things heretofore mentioned, and was owing wholly and solely to the failure and negligence of the defendant and its foreman as above alleged.

The following are the facts surrounding the accident:

Among other branches of industry, the appellant conducts a ship yard, in which wooden ships are built. On tho 29th of May, 1900, appellant had on its ways, in process of construction, the barkentine Minnie E. Caine. Appellant’s shipyard and the construction of the ship were in charge of a shipyard foreman, one George E. E. Monk, who had full direction and control of the men working upon this vessel. It was on this day, and while working on this vessel, that Henry C. Sroufe received the injuries from which he died. At the time of the accident the shipyard crew was composed of said Monk, some ten or twelve ship carpenters, and two winchmen; the latter having charge of the donkey engine or winch used in hoisting. The crew at this time were engaged in putting a cant in place in the after framework of the vessel. The keel, in framing, was on blocks [386]*386built up over four feet high. Fastened to tbe ribs or frames of tbe ship during her construction, and running lengthwise from stem to stern, were large timbers called “ribbons.” There were a number of parallel ribbons, one above the other, with intervals of only a few feet between them; the lowest ribbon being under the bilge of the ship, and the highest ribbon at the top of the ribs or frames. Standing on end and underneath the body of the ship were many upright timbers, called “shores” or “standards.” The ship was being constructed on a planked wharf. The lower end of these shores rested on the wharf, the upper ends being fastened under and against the lower surface of these ribbons. The purpose of these shores was to hold the ship up and in place during construction, and they were firm and solid under the weight of the vessel. There were two rows of these shores all around the ship, and in some places three rows, the row set under the ribbon fastened under the bilge being called “bilge shores,” in distinction from the rows of shores set under other ribbons. These rows of shores were not straight, but, like the ribbons under which they were set, conformed to the curvature of the ship. The keel of the ship was 180 feet in length. These shores were six or seven feet apart. The shores under one ribbon were' not set opposite the shores under another ribbon, but were, like brickwork, set between or apparently alternating. Looking from forward toward aft, or vice versa,, these shores presented the aspect of an irregular forest of uprights; the arrangement in this ship actually making a shore standing in every two feet of distance.

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Bluebook (online)
68 P. 896, 28 Wash. 381, 1902 Wash. LEXIS 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sroufe-v-moran-bros-co-wash-1902.