Watson v. J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Co.

61 So. 795, 132 La. 796, 1913 La. LEXIS 1942
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 31, 1913
DocketNo. 19,100
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 61 So. 795 (Watson v. J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watson v. J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Co., 61 So. 795, 132 La. 796, 1913 La. LEXIS 1942 (La. 1913).

Opinions

Statement of the Case.

MONROE, J.

The two suits, the titles of which are given above, were instituted for the recovery of damages for personal injuries sustained by the minor Watson (who has since attained majority and made himself a party hereto), and resulting in the death of the minor son of the plaintiffs, Mercer, by reason of an accident, which plaintiffs attribute to the fault of the defendants, and which occurred while the minors were engaged in certain work in the employ, as plaintiffs allege, of said defendants. It is admitted that the Iron Mountain Lumber Company is not a judicial person, but is merely a name under which J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company, Limited, transacts part of its business; and the evidence shows that while the Natchez, Ball & Shreveport Railway Company is incorporated, and appears to be the owner of a couple of logging roads which extend from different mills of the J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company into the woods, said corporation is practically owned and is wholly controlled by the same persons who own and control said mills; that practically its entire business consists in the handling of the logs and lumber used and produced by said mills; and that all of the employés who work upon or for said railroad or corporation and receive salaries or wages are paid by the J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company, Limited, through the Iron Mountain Lumber Company, Limited. The answers of said railroad company and of said J. F. Ball Bro. Lumber Company, Limited, do not specifically deny that the minors, Watson and Mercer, were employed by them, but allege, each of them:

“That if it will be found, upon the trial, that plaintiffs’ son was in the employ of respondent, and * * * was injured while so employed, the injuries were due to his own fault * * * and to the fault * * * of his fellow servants, and to the risks and hazards known and patent, obvious, and apparent * * * and ordinarily incident to whatever employment, if any, plaintiffs’ son was engaged in,” etc.

There was judgment in the district court in favor of the defendants, and the Watsonsalone have appealed; but as their case was-, consolidated with that of the Mercers, for the purposes of the trial, and the testimony was taken for the purposes of both eases, both titles have been retained.

It appears from the evidence that the railroad which runs from the mill of the defendant lumber company at Pollock into the woods has a “fill” or embankment, say, 150-feet in length, with a base of, say, 54 feet, and that it extends across a little valley between two pine-wooded hills, and that the wooden culvert beneath said “fill” or embankment, whereby the waters coming down the valley were allowed to continue on their-course, having rotted, it was found advisable to replace it, and, in order to do so, to make-a transverse cut through the embankment from the crown down to the bottom of the-ditch to and into the natural surface on which the embankment rests, and from and in which the old culvert was to be removed and the new one put in its place; the extreme depth of the cut to be made being-about 14 feet. According to the testimony of defendants’ witnesses by whom the work was directed, the intention was to make the cut 12 feet wide at the top and 10 feet wide at the bottom, thus giving each of the-sides a slope of 1 foot in 14; and it is possible that such a slope was given and that,, being so slight, it escaped observation, a ma[800]*800jority of the witnesses having testified that to them the sides appeared to be perpendicular. When the work of excavation had progressed to a depth of some five feet, there was left an arch or natural bridge extending from one side of the cut to the other, upon which, as still further progress was made and it became impracticable to throw it at once to the top, the dirt was first thrown, and from which it was “relayed” or rethrown upon the surface, near the edges of the cut, whence it was again removed (so as to keep it from filling in again, and so as to make the necessary room) by laborers who were stationed there for that purpose. All of the witnesses agree that the arch was used for the purpose stated, but those who were in charge of the work disclaim having had any such purpose, or, in fact, any purpose, in view in leaving it there, and say that it was left by the laborers of their own accord, probably because the earth or material of which it was composed was found to be hard to handle, though it does not appear that it was harder than any other of the material that was excavated. As the arch extended from one wall of the cut to the other, its length was, of course, measured by the width of the cut; its width was about three feet, and its depth in the middle was about one foot, though somewhat greater near the walls of the cut. The work of excavation appears to have been practically finished on Monday evening (May 16, 1910); and on the following day no work was done because it rained all day, not a driving rain or a pouring rain, but a steady rain, which may have begun, for aught that we find in the testimony, during Monday night and have continued until Tuesday night, and which is described by some of the witnesses as a “season,” which is defined by them (or one of- them) to be a rain from which ground that is broken up will get “good wet.”

On Wednesday morning (May 18th) the work of putting in the new culvert was begun, and it consisted, first, of laying across the bottom of the cut 12x12 inch timbers, 8 feet long, to serve as “mud sills,” upon which there were laid, parallel with the cut, other 12x12 inch timbers in two lines, 6 feet apart, each line consisting of two (or possibly three) of the timbers, the one on top of the other, and each line forming one of the sides or walls of the culvert, which was thus made 6 feet wide inside, 8 feet outside, and three feet deep, and was eventually covered with, say, 2x12 or 4x12 inch planking. While the work thus referred to was in progress, however, the arch fell and interrupted it, and the laborers were set to work to remove the material of which it had been composed; and about an hour and a half later, while they were so engaged, a portion of one side of the cut caved in'upon them, crushing or smothering the life out of the minor Mercer, who was a boy about 15 years old, half burying the minor Watson, who was about, or past 20 years of age, and inflicting upon him the injuries here complained of, and injuring several other of the laborers. Watson’s head and shoulders being visible, attention was at once attracted to him, and it was only while his fellow workmen were engaged in digging him out, and after a lapse of perhaps 10 or 15 minutes, that Mercer’s head or body was discovered, and he was then dead. Watson was crushed down against the timbers that were to be used in the construction of the culvert and was badly bruised generally; but his most serious injuries consisted of the crushing of one of his testicles to such an extent that it was necessary to remove it, and the dislocation of one of his knee joints, which, as a result, has been left so that it continues to become dislocated on slight provocation. He seems, however, to have recovered his physical strength and to have gone back to work again within a couple of months, or, per[802]*802haps, earlier, and at the time of the trial was not disabled, save in so far as the loss of his testicle may be considered to have operated to produce that result. Upon that point, two physicians have testified that, in their opinions, he has been deprived of the power of procreation, and that the effect of his loss, upon his mind, will be prejudicial to his energy and his ambition.

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Related

Baker v. Bowie Lumber Co.
92 So. 129 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1922)
Mercer v. Natchez Ball & S. Ry. Co.
75 So. 234 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
61 So. 795, 132 La. 796, 1913 La. LEXIS 1942, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-j-f-ball-bro-lumber-co-la-1913.