West Kentucky Coal Co. v. Parker's Administrator

17 S.W.2d 753, 229 Ky. 685, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 822
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 10, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 S.W.2d 753 (West Kentucky Coal Co. v. Parker's Administrator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West Kentucky Coal Co. v. Parker's Administrator, 17 S.W.2d 753, 229 Ky. 685, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 822 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Commissioner Tinsley

Reversing.

The appellant, West’ Kentucky Coal Company, owns and operates on the Ohio and Mississippi rivers a large towboat called the “Charles F. Richardson”; the appellant, Fred McCandless, was, and had been for a number of years prior to the accident herein referred to, master of the boat. In July, 1927, the boat, with a tow of 26 barges of coal, left Paducah, Ky., bound for Vicksburg, Miss., with Captain McCandless in charge.' The boat and tow reached Laconia, Ark., between 5 and 6 o’clock on the afternoon of July 15th, and proceeded to tie up for the night. When it moved into the river bank for that purpose, two lines were run from the barges, and another .line was run from the boat to the river bank, and tied to trees. Captain McCandless was in charge of and directing the landing operations, and, when these lines were run out and tied, he advised the pilot of the boat that all was fast, and the pilot signaled the engine men to stop the engine. The captain then went to his supper. The wind was blowing off shore, and this caused the head, or front, of the tow to drift out from the bank. Decedent, who was at the time, acting as mate, directed some of the “roustabouts” to attach a line to the capstan of the boat (referred to in the record as the “niggerhead”) and to carry the line across the barges, wind it around a timber-head, and to then carry the line to a tree on the river bank and tie it.

A “timberhead” is a wooden standard 12 to 14 inches square standing above the top of the barge. There are 12 to 15 timberheads on each barge. • Decedent was at .this time: standing on the line deck of the fuel flat. A “line deck” is a narrow platform at each end of a barge, and some 12 to 18 inches wide; a “fuel flat”-is a barge *687 of coal used to supply tlie engines of the boat. When the line was run from the capstan to the timberhead, and then to a tree on the river bank, the end of the line on the bank was considerable higher than the timber; head; and, when the capstan started revolving, for the purpose of tightening the line and thus drawing the head of the tow into the river bank, the line slipped over and off the timberhead, and, in its rebound, struck decedent, who was standing nearly opposite the angle formed by placing it over the timberhead, and he was knocked into the barge, causing injuries from which he died four days thereafter. The place at which decedent was standing-put him in what is spoken of by the witnesses as “bite of the line.” Conceiving that the injury and death were the result of appellant’s negligence, appellee instituted this action under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (45 TTSCA secs. 51-59), to recover compensation for the decedent’s dependents. He recovered a verdict for $4,-000, and, from the judgment thereon, this appeal is prosecuted.

The negligence complained of is that McCandless, as captain of the boat, directed decedent to tie up the boat and tow; that, while he was at the place where ordered by the captain to work, appellants by gross negligence and carelessness in the operation of the “boat, barges, rope and capstan, caused said rope to be thrown against decedent and to strike him and inflict upon him the injuries from which he died; that defendants, by their gross negligence and' carelessness,- failed to provide him with a reasonably safe place in which to work, or reasonably safe and proper tools, and appliances with which to work”; and that appellant McCandless was directing the “work in which decedent was engaged at the time he received the injuries from which he died, and by the-exercise of ordinary care was in the position to know and' did know, observe and appreciate the danger which decedent was in, and that he was in an' unsafe and dangerous place in which to work and that the tools, appliances, rope and ropes with which decedent was worldng, were unsafe and dangerous, and failed to warn decedent of his danger or to cause the rope or ropes to be loosened.” In an amended petition, after reiterating the allegations of the original petition, it is alleged that decedent’s injuries were the direct and proximate result of the gross, negligence and carelessness of the defendants, their servants, agents, and employees in charge of the boatc *688 Reduced to its last analysis, the gravamen of the complaint is that decedent was provided an unsafe place in which to- Work, unsafe tools with which to work; and that appellants knew, hut negligently failed to warn him, of the danger to which he was exposed.

After traversing the allegations against them, appellants pleaded that the decedent provided his own place in which to work, and the methods of doing the work; that those employed with him were under his control and direction, and any-dangers connected with the work were known to him and were created by him. They further pleaded and relied upon assumption of risk by, and contributory negligence upon the part of, decedent.

On this appeal it is insisted that appellee failed to establish his case, and that appellant’s motion for a directed verdict, at the .conclusion of appellee’s evidence, should have been sustained.

There is no evidence whatever that appellant Mc-Candless, or any other person, ordered or directed the decedent to stand on the line deck of the fuel flat at-or before the time of his injury, or to take or assume .a station at any particular point; nor that it was necessary or even proper for him to be at that particular place at the time of his injury, nor that the nature or character of the work required him to be at that particular place, nor is there any proof that the capstan of the boat, or the timberhead of the barge, or the line put out to draw the tow back to the river bank, or any other instrument with or by which the tow was being brought into the bank, was defective or unsafe in any particular, and no claim is made here that any of them were, or either of them was, defective or in an unsafe condition. The place at which decedent was standing at the time of his injury was unsafe only in that it was in such close proximity to the angle of the line that, when the line slipped off the timberhead, he was within its “bite.”

It is undisputably shown by the evidence that, at the time of tying up the boat, decedent was acting as mate; that, in the absence of the captain, it is the duty of the mate to superintend and direct the tying up of the boat and tow; that the first three lines with which the boat and tow were tied up were run out under the direction/'of appellant McCandless, who then went to his supper, and was not on deck at the time the head of the tow began drifting out into the stream; that decedent directed that the fourth line be run from the capstan, over the tim *689

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 S.W.2d 753, 229 Ky. 685, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-kentucky-coal-co-v-parkers-administrator-kyctapphigh-1929.