Tubbs v. Stone & Webster Construction Co.

159 P. 242, 30 Cal. App. 705, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 110
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 13, 1916
DocketCiv. No. 1506.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 159 P. 242 (Tubbs v. Stone & Webster Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tubbs v. Stone & Webster Construction Co., 159 P. 242, 30 Cal. App. 705, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 110 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

*706 ELLISON, J.,

pro t&m. — Plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him while in the employ of the corporation defendant. At the close of the testimony introduced on behalf of the plaintiff the defendants moved the court for a judgment of nonsuit, which motion was granted. From the judgment that followed this appeal is prosecuted.

The record shows that, in September, 1913, the defendant corporation was engaged in the construction of a concrete wall as part of a power-house in Fresno County, and had in its employ, engaged in said work, a number of men, including the plaintiff. At the time of the accident to the plaintiff the wall had been built up to a height of about forty feet. Below it on the ground level there was a cement floor. Around the inside of the wall was a plank runway four feet wide supported by scaffolding. The runway had no railing or anything else on its side as a protection to those working upon it. It was of rectangular shape. The work of filling the molds with cement in constructing the wall was being done as follows: At one corner of the runway was .a hopper into which the cement was placed by means of a hoist that brought it up from the ground. On the runway some eighteen men were working, each with a wheelbarrow. The wheelbarrows were thirty inches wide and weighed seventy-five pounds when empty and two hundred and fifty pounds when loaded with cement. Each man would place his wheelbarrow under the spout of the hopper and it would be filled by pulling a lever and letting the cement run into it. Then it would be moved to the place on the wall where needed and be emptied into the molds or forms, after which it would be pushed in the same direction it had been moving and around the runway until it again came to the hopper. In this work the men with their wheelbarrows formed a continuous procession. The plaintiff was employed to wheel one of these wheelbarrows, and had been at work about one hour and a half when the accident occurred.

The plaintiff testified: “Well, I was wheeling concrete, you know; when we would empty our wheelbarrow we would go around back to the chute and fill up again, and Brown when I brought a wheelbarrow around, he said, ‘Turn around and go back, you are losing too much time going on around. ’ Q. Where was Brown at that time ? A. He was right about here. *707 [Indicating.] Right about opposite to me when he spoke to me. Q. The point you are speaking of is where you were dumping the concrete, I believe?. A. Yes, sir. Q. What else did he say to you ? A. I don’t know exactly what he said; he said, ‘Turn around and go back, you are losing too damn much time going around this way.’ Q. What did you do then ? A. I just sat down my wheelbarrow and started back with it. Q. Had you already emptied your wheelbarrow at that time? A. Yes, sir; I had just emptied my wheelbarrow when he told me to go around, turn around and go back. When I started back I saw another wheelbarrow coming from the dumper here, and so I knew I couldn’t pass him, you know; so I pulled my wheelbarrow around and straightened up to allow him room to pass, and I don’t know what happened after that; I was struck, and I went down, and I don’t know just exactly— Q. How far down did you go? A. I should judge about thirty-five or forty feet. Q. Did you strike on the way down? A. I must have. I was cut up underneath the jaw, and the whole side of my face was cut up, and this leg was broken. Q. Which leg broken? A. Left one, halfway to the knee. Q. Mr. Tubbs, at the time that you turned back, do you know whether the runway there was wide enough so that another wheelbarrow could pass you? A. I thought it was wide enough by the other man being careful, because there was room enough if he had been careful. Q. Had you been wheeling before that time, using a wheelbarrow on this runway ? A. Not on that runway; no, sir.” On cross-examination he testified: ‘‘Q. Was there any man following you with a load? A. Well, yes, there was another man following me; but I didn’t know he was following me. Q. You didn’t know he was following you? A. No, until I turned around and Brown told me to start back and I took my wheelbarrow like this [indicating] and started back, and as I started back I saw this other fellow coming; and I thought after I pulled my wheelbarrow up like that [indicating] there would be room for him to pass, and there would have been room if he had been careful. I don’t know exactly but I was about fifteen feet from the loading point. Q. In starting back how many steps had you taken before you fell? A. I took two or three steps, I believe, as near as I can say. Q. How near did you approach the man coming in the opposite direction ? A. I don’t know *708 exactly how near I was to him. I see him coming and I pulled up that way just to allow him room to pass. There would have been room enough if he had been careful. Q. You said this morning in answer to your counsel that you knew you couldn’t pass him, did you not? A. I was going along with the wheelbarrow that way [indicating]. I knew I could not have done it that way [indicating]. I pulled up the wheelbarrow to allow him to pass. Q. You knew you couldn’t pass him on that narrow walk, did you? A. Yes, sir. Q. The two wheelbarrows were wider than the walk, were they not? A. Yes, sir. Q. You saw it was dangerous, didn’t you? A. Yes, sir. Q. And you knew that it was dangerous, did you not? A. Well, it wouldn’t have been dangerous if he had been careful. Q. How close would you have to stand to the edge in order to allow him to pass with a loaded wheelbarrow ? A. I would have to stand right on the edge. Q. And you say that there was a sheer fall there of forty feet or thereabouts ? A. Yes, sir. Q. But you knew it was there ? A. Yes, sir. Q. How near did you approach him before you fell? A. Oh, about — I don’t know; about eight or nine feet, maybe ten. I don’t know how far I saw him coming and I knew I could not pass him. Q. He was still eight or nine feet from you when you fell? A. Yes, sir. ’ ’

The defendants’ motion for a nonsuit was made upon the grounds: 1. That the evidence failed to prove the negligence alleged in the complaint; 2. That the evidence shows without conflict that the accident occurred by reason of the plaintiff’s negligence in “voluntarily, carelessly, and negligently and unnecessarily approaching too near to the outer side of the runway; 3. That the danger of drawing to one side of the runway and attempting to permit another person to pass with a loaded wheelbarrow in the position he was, and the danger of his attempting to return toward the point of loading in the same direction in which he had come was so obvious and so apparent that to do so was to assume the risk of the accident occurring necessarily involved; that the danger of falling by attempting to draw near to the side of the runway with his wheelbarrow to permit another to pass with a loaded wheelbarrow was obviously so dangerous that any person in possession of his faculties could not be justified in doing so, even at the command of his employer. “We rely *709 in this motion upon the testimony of the plaintiff himself and upon the law as declared by the supreme court in the ease of Hall v. Clark, 163 Cal. 392, [125 Pac. 1047].”

Upon the first ground of the motion little need be said.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 P. 242, 30 Cal. App. 705, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tubbs-v-stone-webster-construction-co-calctapp-1916.