Thames v. Batson & Hatten Lumber Co.

108 So. 181, 143 Miss. 5, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 238
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1926
DocketNo. 25669.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 108 So. 181 (Thames v. Batson & Hatten Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thames v. Batson & Hatten Lumber Co., 108 So. 181, 143 Miss. 5, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 238 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

*8 Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant was employed by the appellee and was injured in moving some lumber from the place where green lumber was stacked to the dry kiln. This lumber was moved over some tracks by means of cars which were pushed by hand power. Each ear when loaded contained about two thousand seven hundred feet of green lumber; this lumber averaging about five pounds to the foot. The cars, containing the lumber,- were moved down the track to a point where the track extended across another track, and were pushed down the other track to the dry kiln, and there transferred over a crosswise track known as the transfer track, and then, after this transfer, the cars were pushed on to a point opposite the dry kiln. These cars, or trucks, had four wheels, two on each side, and were pushed by physical strength or man power. At the time the appellant was hurt, the loaded car, on which was a wheel it was alleged would not roll, had been brought down the track which ran from the stack, and, in pushing this car at the point where the injury occurred, the plaintiff was caused to strain himself, resulting in a rupture of the stomach.

The declaration was in three counts. In the first count it was alleged that the defendant was doing business in Harrison county, being engaged in the manufacture of lumber, and that the plaintiff was employed as a laborer and by virtue of said employment was a servant of the defendant company, and that it was under duty to furnish him a reasonably safe place in which to work and reasonably safe appliances, tools, and machinery with which to work, and this duty the defendant negligently failed to perform, causing the plaintiff injury.

A second count alleged that the master owed the plaintiff the duty to furnish him a reasonably safe place in which to work and that it was the duty of the defendant to have the rails on the said car track so constructed that, when said ear was pushed in position and in line *9 with the track on which the car of lumber was loaded when the car of lumber came off the main track onto the transfer track the rails of the transfer car track would fit evenly and smoothly with- the rails of the track on which the car of lumber was located; and the defendant negligently failed to do so, but that, when the rail of the transfer car track was put in position so as to be even and level with one rail on the track on which the car was, the other rail of the transfer car track would be something like one-half inch to one inch out of line, and would cause the flange on the car on which the lumber was loaded to strike the end of the rail on the transfer track, so that the car of lumber would not roll and slide smoothly on the tracks as it should have done, necessitating the plaintiff and his men exerting an extraordinary amount of strength in undertaking to get such car of lumber on the tracks of the transfer car.

The third count was based on the failure to furnish sufficient help in doing the work which plaintiff was employed to do.

The plaintiff testified that, when he was employed by the defendant, the foreman who employed him said:

“I want a man who can check lumber and take his men and go and help Blackwell pull the kilns and fill them every morning, or whenever required of them.”

And by “pulling the kilns” was meant taking the dry lumber out of the kilns and refilling the kilns with green lumber.

The plaintiff’s proof tended to show that the wheels on the trucks were flat and worn at places, which made them defective and caused much more exertion than would have been required had they been in proper shape, and that these defects were known to the company; that at the time he was hurt he had only three men besides himself to roll this car with the flat wheel over onto the transfer .track at said point where the transfer rail was one-half an inch wider than the rail of the track from which it was being transferred; that the flange of the *10 wheel caught on the transfer track at this point and fouled, and the plaintiff was forced to use so much strength to get it over that he was injured; that, if the wheel had not been flat, he would have been able to carry it with sufficient speed to get it over the other track, but for the defect in the transfer rail; that at the time he was hurt the flat wheel was dragging when it should have rolled; that he had complained to the foreman about the condition of the cars and told him that he did not have enough help and would rather go home; that Davis, the foreman, thereupon asked him to help him out the best he could and by Monday morning he would try to do better; that, if the car had been in reasonably safe condition, it would have required eight men to handle it, and that at the time of the injury he had only three helpers besides himself, two negroes and a white man, and that some boys had been assigned to help him, but they were not there at the time; that these boys were about fourteen years old and he had complained to the foreman that he could not do anything with them; that they would not work; and that the foreman told him that they were all he had. He testified that when he was hurt he went home; that his abdomen was torn about as wide as his three fingers; that he had had to wear a truss ever since the injury; that he had never worn one before; and that he had not been able to lift anything since. In other words, plaintiff’s testimony tended to prove the facts in support of each count, and was sufficient to go to the jury for that purpose.

Plaintiff’s contentions in respect to each of the counts were disputed by evidence for the lumber company, and there was testimony for the defendants tending to show that the plaintiff had previously been ruptured and had worn a truss for years; in other words, plaintiff’s proof was disputed throughout by that of the defendant.

For the defendant, the court gave its specific instructions applicable to each one of the counts, and a general instruction reading as follows:

*11 “The court instructs the jury for the defendant that, if they believe from the evidence that the defendant used the care of an ordinarily prudent man in selecting the number of employees to move its lumber from the green shed to the dry kiln, then the defendant is not liable, even though you believe from the evidence that some of the employees did not perform the duties assigned to them in the moving of said lumber.”

This instruction is the chief assignment of error for the reversal of the case, and it is insisted that it is erroneous because it ignored some of the counts in the declaration. It will- be observed that the court told the jury in this instruction:

That, if they “believe from the evidence that the defendant used the care of an ordinarily prudent man in selecting the number of employees to move its lumber from the green shed to the dry kiln, then the defendant is not liable, even though you believe from the evidence that some of the employees did not perform the duties assigned to them in the moving of the said lumber.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Batson Hatten Lumber Co. v. Thames
114 So. 25 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 So. 181, 143 Miss. 5, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thames-v-batson-hatten-lumber-co-miss-1926.