Virginia Portland Cement Co. v. Luck's Administrator

49 S.E. 577, 103 Va. 427, 1905 Va. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 12, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 49 S.E. 577 (Virginia Portland Cement Co. v. Luck's Administrator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virginia Portland Cement Co. v. Luck's Administrator, 49 S.E. 577, 103 Va. 427, 1905 Va. LEXIS 12 (Va. 1905).

Opinions

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The administrator of 'William Luck, deceased, brought this action in the Circuit Court of Augusta cotmty, to recover damages of, the Virginia Portland Cement Company for the death of the deceased, caused, as alleged, by the negligence of the defendant.

The action is predicated on the negligence of the defendant in keeping in unsafe repair its premises where the deceased, in the discharge of his duties, was required to work, the specific [434]*434negligence alleged being the failure o-f the defendant to keep sufficiently coverd up and protected a conveyor which crossed a passageway, over and along which the deceased, on the occasion of the injuries from which he died, was required to work. At the trial the plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment for $6,000, and this judgment is before us for review upon a writ of error awarded the defendant.

The declaration contains four counts. In the first it is clearly stated that the defendant company knowingly, etc., failed and neglected to keep said conveyor securely covered so as to furnish a reasonably safe and proper place for the plaintiff’s intestate to work, and that the said intestate exercised due and proper care, and was wholly without fault or neglect on his part. The second count states that the defendant company tore up the covering over the conveyor, and the' company itself, having put the conveyor in that condition, left it open and in a dangerous condition until after the accident to the deceased. In the third count, as in the first and second, the business conducted by the defendant is stated; that in the conduct of its business the defendant used a conveyor, which is described; that the deceased was engaged in trucking cement across the conveyor; that it was the duty of the defendant to provide a safe place for the deceased to work in handling the cement, etc.; and it is charged that the company was notified of the condition of the conveyor, and that it promised to put it in proper condition and failed to do so, etc. And in the fourth count the allegations as to the business conducted by the defendant are repeated, and it is averred that the company knew of the unsafe condition of the conveyor and failed to put it in repair, etc.,, in consequence of which the deceased received the injuries from which he died. So that in each of the counts it is alleged that the company had failed to perform the duty which it owed to the deceased to keep its premises in reasonably safe" repair,. [435]*435stating in what respect the duty existed and wherein the company had failed to perform the duty, and either charges that the company had notice of the unsafe condition of its premises in the respect stated, or sets out facts from which it was necessarily to be inferred that the company was aware of the unsafe condition of its premises in the particulars stated in the several-counts, and in all of which it is averred, though unnecessarily, that the deceased was without fault in the premises.

We are of opinion that the declaration and each count-thereof was sufficient to inform the defendant of the nature of the demand made upon it; states sufficient facts to enable the court to say upon demurrer, if the facts stated were proved, whether the plaintiff would be entitled to recover; and, therefore, the demurrer to the declaration was properly overruled. Hortenstein v. Va.-Car. Ry. Co., 102 Va. 914, 47 S. E. 996.

The circumstances under which the deceased received the injuries from which he died are as follows: The defendant company is engaged in the manufacture of cement in the county of Augusta, and in its business it is necessary to use a large amount of machinery and employ a large number of men, some of the machinery used being of a more or less dangerous character. The plant is organized into different departments, and a separate force of men are employed in these several departments, though it seems that they are not required to work in and confine themselves to the departments in which they are employed. One department is known as the operating department, another as the construction department, and there are several others; but it is only necessary to refer to the two departments named in this opinion.

In the operating department the cement is manufactured, and in this department is what is known as the stockhouse, in which the cement is packed in bags and barrels for shipment. The cons'truction department has charge of the work of -making - [436]*436the roads, constructing buildings and other things necessary to equip the plant and keep it in working order. The stockhouse referred to is a large building about 250 x 250 feet, in which there are a number of large bins for storing cement, and in the centre is a space- in which the cement is handled. "At either end of this building, between the bins and the outer walls, runs ■a passageway four or four and a half feet wide, and across the. building at either end, at the inner line of this passageway, about four or four and a half feet from the outer wall, runs a large screw, about nine inches in circumference, and known as a conveyor. The screw runs in a trough about fourteen inches square on the outside, and ten inches on the inside, and its motive power is obtained from a room in the stockhouse known as the motor room. The cement and plaster are put in this ten-inch trough from the bins, and from other openings along and over the screw, and the revolutions of the screw convey it from one point to another in the house. Between the motor room referred to and one of the bins, numbered 13, is a space from four to- six feet, two inches (as variously stated in the testimony) wide. In passing from the centre of the stockhouse through this space into the four, or four and a half, foot passageway at that end of the house, from which the cement is loaded on to a wagon at the door, the conveyor has to be crossed. The conveyor is covered by boards nailed down flush with the-floor of the building, but it is necessary frequently to take up sections of this covering to get at the conveyor in order to repair it, as it is very frequently clogged up and often prizes up the covering over it, and, when it becomes choked, it is often relieved by putting plaster in the cement, as some forms of cement require a mixture of plaster. On the day before the accident out of which this suit arises, about fourteen inches in length of the' covering of the conveyor had been removed in the passageway between the motor room and bin Ho. [437]*43713, in order to repdir the conveyor by putting in at that point what is known as a “hanger,” and the conveyor was thus left exposed until after the accident on the following day.

Among other employees engaged in the stockhouse are men whose business it is to carry various materials, cement, plaster, etc., from one point to another in the house on hand-trucks, Avhich are from twenty to twenty-four inches wide.

The deceased, William Luck, was a teamster on the yard of the defendant company, in charge of a two-horse wagon and team, and was assisted by one Samuel Webb, in connection with the construction department. His duty Avas to haul the materials of various sorts used in that department. The foreman of the company over the deceased Avas a Mr. Teabo, and on the occasion of this accident one Cooper Iiwing Avas in charge of a gang of hands making cement work on the yard of the company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 S.E. 577, 103 Va. 427, 1905 Va. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-portland-cement-co-v-lucks-administrator-va-1905.