Surry Lumber Co. v. Zissett

133 A. 458, 150 Md. 494, 1926 Md. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 8, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 133 A. 458 (Surry Lumber Co. v. Zissett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Surry Lumber Co. v. Zissett, 133 A. 458, 150 Md. 494, 1926 Md. LEXIS 47 (Md. 1926).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

' On October 6th, 1924, a schooner, the Emily Katherine, carrying a cargo belonging to the Surry Lumber Company, a corporation engaged in the wholesale lumber business in Baltimore City, arrived at Baltimore and proceeded to Pier 6, Pratt Street, a public dock of Baltimore City, to dock and to unload its cargo on a space on that dock or wharf, which had been allotted at its request to the lumber company for that purpose by the Harbor Master of Baltimore City at a rental of twenty cents for each thousand feet of lumber stored thereon. On the same day the lumber company gave á contract for unloading the vessel to Clayton Jackson, a “stevedore contractor,” at “so much” per thousand feet.

*497 The hunker was in two sizes, 2x4 and 2x6, and Jacfcson first unloaded and piled up the 2x4 lumber on the dock and then the 2x6 size. Theodore Mottu & Company had also at that time lumber piled on the same dock and, during the unloading; of the Emily Katherine, was engaged in loading it on a truck operated by its employees. Edward Zissett, an employee of Mottu & Company, helped to load its truck, and as he was carrying lumber from its pile on the dock to its truck, one of the piles of 2 x 4 lumber belonging to the Surry Lumber Company “buckled” and fell, partly covering him, breaking his right leg, and otherwise injuring him.

While it is quite impossible from the record to say what were the relative positions of Zissett, the Surry 'Company’s lumber, the Mottu Company’s lumber, and the truck, it does appear that the pile which fell was about ten feet from the pile at which Zissett was working.

As a result of the accident, Zissett was badly injured and was for some time unable to engage in his ordinary work, and incurred expenses for hospital and surgical attendance and treatment, on account of which he applied for and wa's allowed twelve dollars a week by The Industrial Accident Commission during the period of his disability. And on January 16th, 1925, he and the Phoenix Indemnity Company (which paid the compensation) brought this suit against the appellant and Clayton Jackson to recover compensation for his injuries and the losses incidental thereto. The trial resulted in a verdict for Jackson, and against the appellant, and from the judgment on the verdict against it the Surry Lumber Company took this appeal.

At the conclusion of the whole case the plaintiff offered two prayers, which the court granted, and the defendant seven, of which the court granted two and refused the rest, and those rulings are the subject of the only exception submitted by the record.

The refused prayers were designated “Defendant’s First,” “Third,” “A,” “B” and “D” prayers. Its “First” and *498 “A” prayers were demurrers to the whole evidence irrespective of the pleadings; its “Third” prayer was intended to present the proposition that if the accident was caused by the plaintiff’s negligence he could not recover; its “B” prayer instructed the jury that if they found that Jackson contracted with the Surry Lumber Company to discharge the cargo of lumber and pile it on the pier at a set price per thousand feet, that he was an independent contractor for whose negligence the Surry Lumber Company was not responsible, and that their verdict should be in its favor, and its “D” prayer submitted the theory that if Jackson was a capable and experienced stevedore and was employed as an independent contractor by the appellant to unload the cargo of lumber, that the plaintiff could not recover even though the lumber which fell on the plaintiff had been piled in a negligent and unskilled manner by Jackson’s employees.

The plaintiff’s first prayer submitted the proposition that whether Jackson was or was not an independent contractor,, if, when the accident happened, he had fully piled and completed the pile of lumber which fell and injured the plaintiff and it had been accepted by the Surry Lumber Company, and “that the plaintiff, while standing and loading lumber from the adjoining pile, as set forth in the evidence, was struck and injured by the Limber from the pile of the Surry Lumber Company, suddenly falling upon and over him, when he, the plaintiff, was exercising due care, if the jury so believe, then their verdict must be for the plaintiff and against the Surry Imrnber Company, unless that defendant by preponderance of testimony satisfies the minds of the jury that the falling of said lumber was not caused by its negligence.” His second prayer instructed the jury as to the-measure of damages applicable to the facts of the case and' was in a form repeatedly approved by this court and need not be further referred to.

From these prayers it appears that the plaintiff rested his right to recover upon the theory that a presumption of negligence arose from the mere fall of the pile of lumber which *499 injured him, and that, having proved the fall and the injury at a time when the pile of lumber which fell was under the appellant’s control, he w:as entitled to recover unless the defendant,- the Surry Lumber Company, affirmatively proved that its fall was not occasioned by any negligence or default on its part, while the defence of the appellant wa's that (1) the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur was not applicable to the facts of this case, and (2) that when the accident happened the pile of lumber which fell on and injured the plaintiff was under the control of an independent contractor for whoso negligence or default it was not answerable. We will therefore consider in connection with those contentions the evidence submitted by the record.

Edward Zissett, the plaintiff, after testifying that he had been directed by Theodore Mottu & Company, by which he was employed to help load some lumber which it had on Pier 6 on its trucks, said that when the last truck came to “finish up' the pile” he had “moved to feed on the off side,” '“where they were piling this pile to make them handy for mo to get it on the truck when he gets in” and that some colored men were “piling on the other pile.” He was then asked to tell just what happened, but his statement in reply to that ■question, as well as the testimony of other witnesses to which we will refer, is to some extent unintelligible because of his •constant use of" such indefinite expressions as “here” and “there” and “this,” which may have been perfectly intelligible to the jury, but which are quite meaningless to us, in the absence of any chart or diagram illustrating their appli•cation, as will appear from this quotation from his testimony: '“Say, for instance, this is the pile they were piling. There was another pile up here, like this, and our pile was right 'in here, this here space, about ten feet, and this pile wasn’t any more than about this high (indicating), and this pile they were piling was, I guess, ten or twelve feet high, and at the time, they were still piling on it; and I put the lumber •over here, because there was a pile right in front of this, you *500 see, on the driveway, which was back there, and the pile over here on the driveway was about there, and the. pile over here on the driveway was about here (indicating).

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Bluebook (online)
133 A. 458, 150 Md. 494, 1926 Md. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/surry-lumber-co-v-zissett-md-1926.