Warren v. Townley Manufacturing Co.

155 S.W. 850, 173 Mo. App. 116, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 670
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 8, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 155 S.W. 850 (Warren v. Townley Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren v. Townley Manufacturing Co., 155 S.W. 850, 173 Mo. App. 116, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 670 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

—Action by plaintiff as widow of Calvin Warren, to recover damages for the death of her husband, alleged to have been caused by the negligent acts of defendant. Defendant is a company engaged in the business of converting logs into shingles [118]*118and other products at its mill in Dunklin county. At the time of the accident which is the foundation of this action, defendant was placing certain machinery for the conveyance of logs to its mill. A part of the machinery was what is called an overhead skid, consisting of a stationary engine located upon a flat car set on a spur track, that track ending against a tall cypress tree, called a “head tree.” A steel cable, designated as a carriage line, was wrapped around this tree about forty feet above the ground and carried from there to another tree called the “tail tree,” which was about six hundred feet away, and fastened, around that tail tree. There was a movable pulley or carriage, suspended from this cable or carriage line, which was moved from one end to the other by means of ropes attached to the carriage, these ropes being operated by a revolving drum which received its power from the stationary engine. Hanging from the movable carriage was a steel rope, at the end of which was a set of tongs, which, when fastened to logs near the tail tree were carried by steam power and, by means' of this movable carriage, along the cable to the place desired.

On the day of the accident, the flat car on which this engine was in place was immediately under the top of the head tree. Preliminary to the stringing of the cable between the head and tail trees, the foreman of defendant in charge of the gang selected a tall cypress tree as the head tree. This tree was partly dead, having some dead and some living branches on it toward the top, while the top of the tree itself was dead. Before wrapping the end of the cable around this tree, the foreman directed a man to climb the tree, cut off the top and cut off some dead limbs. This man went up the tree by means of climbers, cut off the top, which fell to the ground, cut off a large limb under the top, that- also falling, and then partially cut another limb and broke it off, so that it also [119]*119fell to the ground. He climbed down from the tree and the men below appear to have then fastened guy-lines to the tree, shaking it to detach any loose or dead branches that might be lodged in the tree. The cable was then stretched from the head tree to the tail tree. The carriage line was then attached and the gang appears to have been taking the slack out of the overhead carrier line or cable in some way, not very clear to us. At any rate, the carriage or “skidder,” as it is called, with the engine and the drum on it, was directly at the foot of this tree. While some of the gang were taking in the slack of the cable, the strain upon it shook the head tree and a branch of one of the limbs which had been cut off and which it appears had lodged in the upper part of the tree and which was between three and four feet long and about two and a half inches in diameter, fell and struck plaintiff’s husband, killing him.

This is as nearly accurate a statement of the situation as it is possible to make from the testimony and from the photographs which accompany the abstract and which were identified as fair representations of the condition at or about the time of the accident. The members of the gang who were not actually at work were standing around, or helping in whatever had to be done; among them plaintiff’s husband, whose direct employment was that of a log scaler for the company defendant. He was standing on the end of the carriage or skidder, within two or three feet of the body of the head tree, not doing anything in particular but apparently waiting to go to work, and assisting, as far as was necessary, the other members of the gang in doing anything that had to be done in connection with .this preparatory work. There was a roof directly over the engine and drum of this skidder, but the end toward the tree and on which end plaintiff’s husband was standing had no covering over it.

[120]*120The negligence charged is failing, to have a covering over this carriage; negligence in selecting a dead and rotten tree; negligence in failing to remove this dead branch which had lodged in the tree; briefly, failing to use ordinary care in providing plaintiff’s husband with a reasonably safe place in which to do his work.

The trial was before the court and a jury, and a verdict returned in favor of - plaintiff in the sum of $2500, upon which judgment was rendered. Defendant, filing its motion for a new trial, as well as one in arrest, and excepting to the action of the court in overruling these motions, has duly perfected its appeal to. this court.

There are five errors assigned. First, to the error of the court in permitting plaintiff to offer evidence tending to prove the custom of defendant’s servants in putting up the skidder as no such custom was pleaded in plaintiff’s petition. Second and third, to error of the court in refusing instructions offered by defendant at the close of plaintiff’s evidence and at the close of all the evidence, to the effect that plaintiff was not entitled to recover. Fourth, to the error of the court in refusing to give an instruction asked by defendant, as follows: “That defendant was not guilty of negligence in failing to maintain a roof or cover over the engine and skidder or the engine or skidder, or any part or portion of them, or either of them, and your verdict cannot be for the plaintiff on the ground of such failure, if you find from the evidence that defendant was guilty of such failure.” The fifth error assigned is to the giving of instructions asked by plaintiff.

Taking up the first assignment of error, we do not think it is tenable. It is true that no particular custom was pleaded but what counsel refers to as custom, that word being used in putting the question by counsel for plaintiff when drawing out the evidence, considered in the light of the answers and as evidently understood by the witnesses and by the jury, does not appear to [121]*121have referred to any general custom or usage among people engaged in like work, but referred to the manner in which the men composing these gangs were in the habit of doing this work, evidence clearly admissible under the pleadings and the issues; nothing more than a presentation to the jury, of the manner in which the machinery was set up and operated by these gangs, by the employees of defendant, when setting up and operating the appliances; tending to show that on this particular occasion it was done in the manner usually pursued by the employees of defendant when about this particular work. There was no general custom attempted to be proved, in the legal meaning of that term. What was in evidence and what was elicited by these questions, was, as before stated, evidence showing how work of this kind was carried on by the defendant. We see nothing improper in this and certainly no prejudicial error in its admission.

The second and third assignments of error, challenging the presence of' any substantial evidence warranting a recovery, are not tenable. A careful reading of the testimony for plaintiff shows that there was substantial evidence to go to the jury on the averments of negligence in the petition, the answer being a general denial without any plea of contributory negligence and there being no attempt to apply the doctrine of fellow-servants.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W. 850, 173 Mo. App. 116, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-townley-manufacturing-co-moctapp-1913.