Verlinda v. Stone & Webster Engineering Corp.

119 P. 573, 44 Mont. 223, 1911 Mont. LEXIS 87
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1911
DocketNos. 2,987 and 3,018
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 119 P. 573 (Verlinda v. Stone & Webster Engineering Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Verlinda v. Stone & Webster Engineering Corp., 119 P. 573, 44 Mont. 223, 1911 Mont. LEXIS 87 (Mo. 1911).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BRANTLY

delivered the opinion of the court.

Action by plaintiff to recover damages for injuries sustained by him through the negligence of the defendant Stone & Webster Engineering Corporation (hereinafter referred to as the company) and defendants William Wallace and Samuel Turehin, two of its employees, during the course of his employment by the company as a common laborer.

As is usual in such cases, the evidence is in conflict as to the cause 'and particulars of the accident. From the testimony of the witnesses and the exhibits introduced at the trial, we gather the following facts: On April 18, 1910, the company was engaged- in the construction of a dam in the Missouri river at Hauser Lake, in Lewis and Clark county. The material used for the construction was concrete. It was put in in sections, being dumped into molds or forms built of heavy lumber by means of a skip operated by a derrick or from cars. When the concrete had hardened, the lumber forms were torn away and the material used for the construction of other forms as the work of construction: progressed. These forms consisted of 12x12 upright timbers, lined on the inside with heavy, planks. At the time of the accident a crew of carpenters and helpers, under the direction of Wallace, who had exclusive charge of this part of the work with power to hire and discharge men, were engaged in tearing away a form and setting the timbers in place for another. The timbers were lifted and moved by a derrick, the jib or mast of which was placed about eighty-five feet from the face of the completed section. The boom was seventy feet in length. Attached to the end of the boom was an iron chain twenty feet in length, the weight of which is estimated by the witnesses at from 170 to 300 pounds. It was connected with the boom by an oval link or ring at the end, slipped over the hook in the fall tackle attached to the boom. The hook was not moused or fitted with any device to prevent the chain from being accidentally unhooked. The section which had been completed, and from which the timbers were being [229]*229removed, extended along the course of the river and ended at or near the lower side of the dam. The form in course of construction extended across the course of the river. At this point the main body of the work had been completed to the height of about seventy-five feet from the river bed. The newly completed section was thirty feet in height and formed a ledge along the transverse face of the higher structure. On this ledge were stationed several men whose business it was to assist in removing the timbers by means of the derrick. Among these was defendant Turchin. The derrick was operated by an engine placed beyond the mast or jib from the point of operation. Its movements were controlled by the engineer in obedience to signals given by Wallace. Wallace’s position was upon a scow resting in the bed of the river immediately below the dam, and about five feet outside of the line of the new form. The form was some thirty feet in height. It rested upon a base of concrete near the level of the river bed, which had previously been put in. Several other men — carpenters and laborers, the plaintiff being among the latter — were below on the concrete base. Their business was to put in place the upright timbers and brace them so that they would be ready for the lining. Wallace’s position on the scow was twelve or fifteen feet above them. When it became necessary to lift out one of the timbers, the chain was wrapped around it at the top and fastened by inserting a hook at the end of the chain in one of the links. Since the boom was not long enough to drop the chain at the place where it was desired to use it, it was hauled up by a rope by the men who were standing on the ledge, and was secured to a timber in the manner heretofore indicated. When in this position the line of its direction was at quite a wide angle from the perpendicular, so that if the end was released it would drop and swing as a pendulum. It had been secured to a timber, and the signal was about to be given to start the engine, when Wallace noticed a joint of heavy iron pipe lying on the concrete base below, which he thought might be broken during the handling of the timbers. He stopped the work in order that it might be removed, and directed the plaintiff to fit a chain around it so that it could [230]*230be lifted out of the way with the derrick. The plaintiff was in a stooping position engaged in adjusting the chain. Wallace ordered the men on the ledge to throw off or let down the chain. Turchin, who was standing near by, without waiting for help by the men standing near and without using a rope to ease it down, loosed it, and, being unable to hold it because of its weight, let it swing. It first swung away and then back. As it came back the lower end of it struck a brace timber, with the result that the chain was jarred off the hook in the fall tackle, and the lower end of it as it fell on the swing struck the plaintiff on the face and head, destroying an eye and inflicting other serious injuries. There is a direct conflict in the statements of the witnesses as to whether the lower end of the chain was ■high enough from the base to swing clear of a man standing thereon. As a whole, however, the evidence furnishes ground for the conclusion that the chain would not have reached plaintiff, had it not jarred from the hook and fallen.

The pleadings are somewhat voluminous. The allegations of the complaint may be comprehensively summarized as follows: That the defendants were culpably negligent (1) in failing to have the hook in the fall tackle moused or guarded so as to prevent the boom chain from becoming detached by a sudden jar or jolt; (2) in permitting the chain to be handled by one man, it being apparent that it was too.heavy for one man to handle it safely; (3) in permitting the chain to be let down where other employees were at work, without a rope or other means by which it could be lowered with safety; (4) in maintaining and operating the derrick so far away from the place of work as to make probable the happening of such an accident as that which resulted.in the injury to plaintiff; and (5) in failing to furnish the plaintiff a safe place in which to work.

The defendant Turchin suffered judgment by default. The answer of Wallace was a general denial. The company alleged that the derrick and other appliances were reasonably safe, were operated in a reasonably safe manner, and that, if the plaintiff was injured by the negligence of anyone, it was that of his fellow-servants. The trial resulted in a verdict in favor of plain[231]*231tiff against the company. The jury made no finding with reference to Wallace. The court rendered judgment upon the verdict against the company and dismissed the action as to Wallace. The company has filed separate appeals from the judgment and an order denying its motion for a new trial. They will be considered together.

1. Counsel for plaintiff have presented a question of practice arising out of the proceedings on motion for new trial, which, if resolved in their favor, they insist, precludes a hearing of the appeal from the order denying the motion. We shall not notice it further than to say that we have examined it and have found it without substantial merit. The bill of exceptions was served and settled in time, in conformity with the requirements of the statute.

• 2. The first assignment of error is based upon the refusal of the court to submit to the jury defendant’s requested instructions numbered 1 and 2. The instructions are too long to quote.

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Bluebook (online)
119 P. 573, 44 Mont. 223, 1911 Mont. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/verlinda-v-stone-webster-engineering-corp-mont-1911.