Klingenstein v. Miehle Printing Press & Manufacturing Co.
Klingenstein v. Miehle Printing Press & Manufacturing Co.
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal from a judgment in plaintiff’s favor and against the" defendant Miehle Printing Press and Manufacturing Company for the sum of fifteen thousand dollars for damages arising out of the death of one Frederick Klingenstein, the husband of plaintiff, through the alleged negligence of said defendant. As to the codefendant McGaraghan the verdict and judgment exonerated him from liability.
There is no substantial dispute as to the facts of the case. On and prior to the seventh day of August, 1913, the defendant Miehle Printing Press and Manufacturing Company was the owner of a printing-press described as a No. 1 Pony Miehle Printing-press, which it on said day contracted to sell and deliver to the firm of Lambert & McKeehan, printers, at Eureka, the purchase price to be paid in installments during a period of two years thereafter, title to remain in the seller until the installments were fully paid. On August 27, 1913, the said defendant Miehle Printing Press and Manufacturing Company, in contemplation of the delivery of said press to the purchaser, entered into a written contract with its codefendant McGaraghan, a dray- *354 man of Eureka, wherein the latter offered to “unload, haul, and handle” said press and to convey the same “from the steamer to the pressroom of Lambert & McKeehan for the price of $7.50; we to furnish all necessary ropes, planks, tools, etc., and we to be responsible for damages done to property or persons while said press is in our care. And we agree to allow use of ropes, planks, tools, etc., free of charge to your erector while erecting press. Any labor desired by you to assist your erector in setting press will be furnished you by us on request at fifty cents per hour per man.” This offer, which was upon one of the printed forms of the said Printing-press Company, was negotiated, signed, and accepted by the parties thereto at the pressrooms of the said purchasers of the press, and after an inspection of the premises by McGaraghan, accompanied by the agent of his said codefendant, during which it appeared that the press was to be delivered through a back way to the press-room and admitted to the floor thereof through the back door. At the time this contract was entered into none of the immediate parties to it knew where the press was to be set up in the pressroom, since that, apparently, was a matter to be determined by the seller’s erector, who was later to appear upon the scene. The press arrived at- the steamer' landing in Eureka on or about October 6, 1913, and on that day also one J. C. Nicholson also reached that city. Said Nicholson was an employee of the said defendant Printing-press Company, charged with the duty of erecting and installing said press. He had been engaged in the business of erecting printing-presses by his said employer for some eight or nine years,, and his duties, as defined by himself when on the witness-stand on behalf of his said employer, were “to assemble the machine..and put it in running order, handle the various parts of it. ’ ’ In the performance of these duties, according to his own statement, he was to uncrate the several parts of the press for the purpose of assembling, putting in place, and erecting the same. Nicholson had been sent to Eureka by his said employer in conformity with its agreement with the purchasers of the [press providing that “the vendor agrees to send a competent man to erect and put said press in first-class running order.” On reaching Eureka, Nicholson went to the pressroom and there determined' the place upon the floor thereof where the press when erected was to stand, and directed the removal of *355 certain other machinery and appliances then occupying said floor so as to make room for the assembling and erection of the press. He then inquired as to what drayman was to haul the press to its destination, and was informed that McGaraghan had the contract so to do. He sought Mc-Garaghan and arranged for the delivery of the press on the following day, and for the engagement of two men who were to assist him in the installation of the press. Mc-Garaghan thereupon enlisted the services of the deceased, Frederick Klingenstein, and of one P. W. Davis, who were to assist him in the performance of his agreement for the drayage of the press, and were also to continue to assist Nicholson in the erection of the press after McGaraghan’s duties in respect to its delivery were done. On the following morning McGaraghan with his said two assistants loaded the main body of the press, weighing about two tons, on his dray and hauled it to the rear of Lambert & McKeehan’s printing office, unloading it in the alley, and, conveying it through the back door of the pressroom, deposited it on the pressroom floor inside the door. Nicholson was there, clad in working clothes and ready to begin the work of assembling and installing the press. The work of conveying the heavy portion of the press, which was crated and lying on the floor df the pressroom, was immediately entered upon by Nicholson and with the assistance of Klingenstein and Davis. McGaraghan went out to get some other parts of the machine, but presently returned, and was standing by while the work of moving the heavy crate in the direction of the spot which the press when fully assembled was to occupy. Mr. Nicholson suggested the advisability of putting rollers under the crate, but Davis thought it could be handled with a jack, and Nicholson apparently acquiesced in this suggestion. While the press was thus being moved across the floor, which at the time was greasy and slippery with oil, the crate tilted over and fell upon Klingenstein, causing his death, as a result of which this action was instituted by his widow against both of the defendants herein.
It is not necessary to further review the evidence which justified the jury in reaching this conclusion, but it might be pointed out that the acts of the appellant’s employee, Nicholson, immediately attending and succeeding the death of Klingenstein, as testified to by himself, indicate that he considered himself as in charge of the situation at 'the time the casualty occurred, as, for example, he was actually occupied in helping to move the press when it fell upon Klingenstein; he directed Davis to hire another man to replace the deceased; he proceeded on the morrow to raise and uncrate the press; he paid on behalf of his employer the wages of Davis and of the successor of Klingenstein.
There are several assignments of error in the rulings of the trial court and in its instructions to the jury. We have examined these, but do not deem it necessary to refer to them in detail. As to the rulings of the court in the admission or rejection of certain evidence we find no prejudicial error.
As to the matter of the court’s instructions we have examined these as a whole, and are satisfied that they fully, fairly, -and adequately state the law of the case, and that whatever instructions asked by the appellant the court refused to give were fully covered by those which were given by the court.
Finding no error in this record, the judgment is affirmed.
Waste, P. J., and Kerrigan, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on July 31, 1919.
Shaw, J., Melvin, J., Lawlor, J., Wilbur, J., and Angellotti, C. J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- B. MARY KLINGENSTEIN, as Administratrix, Etc., Respondent, v. MIEHLE PRINTING PRESS AND MANUFACTURING COMPANY (A Corporation), Appellant
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published