Trumann Cooperage Co. v. Crye

209 S.W. 278, 137 Ark. 293, 1919 Ark. LEXIS 470
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 17, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 209 S.W. 278 (Trumann Cooperage Co. v. Crye) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trumann Cooperage Co. v. Crye, 209 S.W. 278, 137 Ark. 293, 1919 Ark. LEXIS 470 (Ark. 1919).

Opinion

WOOD, J.

The appellee instituted this action against the appellant. Appellee alleged that he was in the employ of the company helping to construct tunnels for steaming staves; that he was under the direction of his foreman; that while engaged in the work one of the walls fell on him and injured him severely; that his injury was caused by the negligence of the company in failing to brace the walls, and in failing to secure them to the foundation, and to have them level on the foundation. That the appellee was ignorant of these conditions; that after the injury the appellant company sent the appellee to the hospital at Jonesboro, Arkansas, and placed him under the care of its physicians, where the appellee suffered great pain and anguish for six weeks when his left leg was amputated. That while he was in the hospital the claim agents, attorney, and physician of appellant company came to the hospital and represented to the appellee that appellant was not liable for the accident and that there could be no recovery for same. The physician stated to appellee that he would be well and all right in a short time. Appellee under these representations and relying upon the truth of same signed a release to appellant for all damages he had sustained. He further alleged that prior to, at the time of, and long after the signing of the release he had suffered greatly and was irrational from the strong medicine he had taken and the great pain he had endured. That the representations made to the appellee by the appellant’s agents were false and that they knew the same to be false and that the representations were made for the purpose of inducing the appellee to sign the release.

The appellant in' its answer admitted the injury but denied specifically the allegations of negligence and of misrepresentation and fraud. It set up that appellant had settled with the appellee for the damages that he had sustained, and pleaded such settlement in bar of his right to recover. It also pleaded in defense assumed risk and contributory negligence.

In November, 1914, the appellee was in the employ of appellant. He was a carpenter and was working with the crew, from eight to fifteen men, under the supervision of a foreman in constructing tunnels for the purpose of steaming staves. The tunnels were all constructed on a concrete floor. Each tunnel was 5% feet wide/ 6V% feet high. The entire breadth of the concrete floor was 26 feet and the length was 40 feet. The door was level except at distances of a little over five feet there were elevations 6 inches wide and 4 or 5 inches high made of concrete. On top of these elevations the partition walls of the tunnels were*built of two-by-six pine planks laid flat one upon the other with broken joints. The first two planks were laid on the concrete elevations and thirty-penny nails were driven through them. If these nails had penetrated the concrete they would have extended into same from one-half to one inch. The spikes were driven at intervals of six or eight inches lengthwise and alternately on opposite edges. The walls were not braced but there were pieces, one-by-fours, used as a straightedge to build the wall by and these were connected by one-by-fours nailed on at the top. The crew who built the walls worked in pairs. Wall number one was nailed to a mud sill. Wall number two was laid on the concrete as above indicated. The purpose in laying the planks flat one on the other with broken joints was to make the walls so close that the tunnels would be steam tight.

Crye with a fellow servant had worked on walls two and three, and after these were completed he was directed by his foreman to go between walls one and two to clean out the rubbish and while so engaged wall number two fell upon him, crushing him and inflicting the injuries of which he complains. Workmen thought that the walls while being constructed were safe. Some of the workmen went over them when they were about waist high and some climbed upon them after they were built full height. One of the workmen observed that wall number two before it fell on the appellee, was shaky. It was discovered after the wall fell that the nails which had been driven through the first two boards had drawn the planks up to the head of the nails and had not entered the concrete but raised the boards off the concrete so that wall number two would rock.

Appellee had been working around the factories at Trumann about nine years as a common laborer. He was not a skilled workman.

The above are substantially the facts on the issues of negligence, contributory negligence, and assumption of risks, when stated from the viewpoint of the appellee, and giving the evidence the strongest probative force in his favor.

These issues were submitted to the jury upon correct declarations of law, and there was evidence to sustain the verdict. The court, therefore, did not err in refusing appellant’s prayer for instruction directing the jury to render a verdict in its favor.

Appellant contends that the court erred in refusing its prayer for instruction number 3, which in effect calls the jury that “if Crye helped build wall number two, or was present, saw, or knew how it was built, or if he by the exercise of ordinary care could or should have known the manner in which it was constructed, and all the facts and conditions in connection with it, then he assumed the risk and cannot recover.”

The court instructed the jury on the issues of assumed risk as follows: “You are instructed that the plaintiff assumed all the risks ordinarily incident to the work he undertook to do for the defendant company, and also all those risks where plaintiff was aware of the condition of the tunnels on which he worked and the perils and dangers incident thereto.”

The court also gave the following at the request of the appellant: “If you find from á preponderance of the evidence that the conditions existing which caused or permitted the wall to fall were open, visible and apparent to plaintiff, or in the exercise of ordinary care and observation for his own safety would have been so open and visible, then he can not recover in this suit.”

The court did not err in refusing to give appellant’s prayer for instruction number three. This prayer if granted would have imposed upon the appellee the duty to exercise ordinary care not only to discover the manner of the construction but also the facts and conditions in connection therewith. The instruction was calculated to mislead the jury and cause them to conclude that the appellee had some affirmative duty of inspection to determine whether there were facts and conditions existing that would endanger his safety other than those incident to the ordinary performance of his duty in the manner directed by his foreman. This is not a case where it can be said as a matter of law that the servant was charged with the duty of making his own place safe as he performed his work. The appellant, the master, had planned the work and through its foreman was present directing and supervising its construction. It is not a case where it can be said as a matter of law that the dangers connected with the work were so open and obvious that the servant in the exercise of ordinary care for his own protection would be bound to know and appreciate them.

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Bluebook (online)
209 S.W. 278, 137 Ark. 293, 1919 Ark. LEXIS 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trumann-cooperage-co-v-crye-ark-1919.