Wiltshire's Administratrix v. Kister

160 S.W. 743, 156 Ky. 168, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 366
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 160 S.W. 743 (Wiltshire's Administratrix v. Kister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiltshire's Administratrix v. Kister, 160 S.W. 743, 156 Ky. 168, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 366 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

[169]*169Opinion of the Court by

William Rogers Clay,

Commissioner — Affirming.

James Wiltshire was killed by the explosion of a boiler owned and operated by the defendant, Frank L. Kister, Jr. His administratrix, Mary E. Wiltshire, brought this action to recover damages for his death. From a verdict and judgment in favor of defendant plaintiff appeals.

The facts are these: Defendant at the time of the accident operated a planing mill in the city of Bowling Green. On March 28, 1910, the boiler which furnished the power for the planing mill exploded. James Wilt-shire was killed and several others were injured. At the time of the accident James Wiltshire ran the edger. Finis Coleman was the regular engineer qt the mill. On the day of the accident he was summoned to the police court. His brother, Richard Coleman, took his place as engineer when the mill resumed operations after the noon hour. The explosion occurred shortly after one o’clock, p. m. The saw mill consisted of a shed about 60 feet long and 40 feet wide. Under the shed was the boiler, the engine, the edger, the saw and carriage. A few feet to the east of the shed were the tool house and the dust chute. The engine was about two feet from the edge of the boiler. The edger was about a foot from the side of the boiler, and the edger table, which was about 30 feet long, extended to within four feet of the carriage. John Kister, the foreman in charge, was engaged in filing a saw. When injured, James Wiltshire was running the edger.

Plaintiff based her right to recover on three grounds: (1) Incompetency of the engineer; (2) defective condition of the boiler; (3) defective condition of the pop valve.

On the question of the competency of the engineer, R. C. Coleman, Porter Wyatt, a young man 22 years of age, testified that in his opinion an experience of four or five months in running a laundry engine would not qualify one to run the engine at the saw mill. On cross-examination, however,' he testified that he had never worked at either of the laundries where R. C. Coleman had been employed, nor did he know how much steam each of the engines in those laundries carried, nor had he ever worked with Dick Coleman. Joe Nordlow, a chauffeur, testified that he had had several years experience in running engines. He had known Dick Cole[170]*170man four or five years. In Ms opinion, Dick Coleman was not competent. On cross-examination lie stated that lie did not know the number of pounds of steam the engines in either of the Bowling Green laundries carried. He had stepped in each of them on a few occasions, but did not make any examination of the engine or boiler where Dick Coleman was at work. He had had three days’ experience in repairing boilers.

On the other hand, Coleman’s competency was proven by John Kister, F.-L. Kister, Jr., Finis Coleman, B. J. Borrone, Sam Moseley and George H. Moseley. Mr. Borrone, of the Bowling Green Steam Laundry, testified that prior to the explosion Coleman had operated his engine for six months or more, and he regarded him as a competent, skillful engineer. The boiler in his laundry was a 50-horse power boiler, which was the same horse power as the one that exploded. Sam Moseley and George H. Moseley, proprietors of the Troy Laundry, who had employed R. C. Coleman for nearly a year prior to the explosion, testified that Coleman was a competent engineer.

There was no proof that defendant knew of Coleman ’s alleged incompetency, or that he could have known of it by the exercise of ordinary care.

There was evidence to the effect that the engineer had on 165 pounds of steam. When his attention was called to this fact the engineer said “I don’t give a dam if I blow it into hell.” One of two witnesses testified that the boiler was old and defective and the pop valve would not work. It was also shown that the boiler had been patched. On the other hand, the defendant showed that the pop valve worked properly and was set to pop off at 130 pounds pressure. At the time .of the accident the gauge showed 130 to 135 pounds of steam, and was popping off. Unless there was some hidden defect in the boiler, 165 pounds of steam could have been carried without danger. While it is true that the boiler had been patched the patches survived the explosion while other parts of the boiler were wrecked. Defendant further proved that the hammer test had been used on the boiler when it was set up. Only a short time before the explosion it had been thoroughly gone over, both inside and out. Upon the cause of the explosion, defendant introduced H. G. Brownell, a boiler expert of many years standing, who testified that the defect was one of lamination. This defect was in one of the rings of the boiler [171]*171and not in the other three. The defective place was not discoverable by ordinary inspection, either within or without.

Complaint is made of instructions 10 and 11, which are as follows:

“10. Although the jury may believe from the evidence that the said boiler was defective and that said explosion was caused by such defect, unless they shall further believe from the evidence that such defect was known to the defendant, Kister, or could have been known by him, by the exercise of ordinary care, they will find for the defendant, Kister, and if said defect, if there was a defect in said boiler, was hidden or latent so that it was not known to the defendant, Kister, or could not have been known by him, in the exercise of ordinary care, the jury will find for the defendant. ’ ’

“11. If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant, Kister, or his agent, used ordinary care in the selection of a competent engineer and that said boiler exploded by reason of the willful or malicious recklessness of said engineer not acting in the scope of his employment, then the defendant is not responsible in law for said willful or malicious act, if any, of said engineer, and the jury will find for the defendant. ’ ’

It is claimed that instruction No. 10 is erroneous in that it authorizes a verdict for the defendant without requiring the jury to believe that the explosion was caused alone by the defective boiler,'thus ignoring the right of plaintiff to recover for the negligence or iucompetency of the engineer. The court, however, in former instructions had authorized a verdict for plaintiff if the jury believed from the evidence that the explosion was caused by the defective condition of the boiler, and such defective condition, if any, was known, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have been known, by the defendant. He had further authorized a recovery by plaintiff if the decedent’s injuries were caused by the negligence of the engineer, and the jury believed that the engineer was incompetent, and his incompetency, if any, was known, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have been known, by the' defendant. While it would have been better to frame instruction No. 10 so as to express the idea that the explosion was caused alone by the defective boiler, yet considering the fact that another instruction authorized a recovery by plaintiff based on the negligence and incompetency of the engineer, the [172]*172jury had a right, under that instruction, to find for plaintiff notwithstanding instruction No. 10. In passing on the propriety of an instruction it is the rule to consider all the instructions, and when thus considered, we fail to see how the omission of the word “alone” was either misleading to the jury or prejudicial to the substantial rights of plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W. 743, 156 Ky. 168, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiltshires-administratrix-v-kister-kyctapp-1913.