Yellow Pine Paper Mill Co. v. Lyons
Yellow Pine Paper Mill Co. v. Lyons
Opinion of the Court
This is an action by A. U. Lyons against the Yellow Pine Paper Mill Company to recover damages for personal injuries received by him while at work in defendant’s paper mill. A trial with a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff for $13,500. Its motion for a new trial having been overruled, the defendant appeals.
It was alleged in the petition that the accident through which appellee received his injuries occurred while he and a fellow servant, one Orr, were engaged, by order of Becker, their foreman, in repairing a steam pipe which was leaking, when an explosion of steam occurred, with disastrous results to appellee; his injuries being specifically set out, and being alleged to be serious and permanent.
Appellee based his suit on the ground that the appellant was negligent in that the pipes and fittings upon which he was at work were not of sufficient strength and the proper construction to withstand the steam pressure used on same; that said pipes, fittings, and joints had become rusted, worn, and weakened, and thereby unsafe; that appellant negligently put appellee to work repairing said joints while steam pressure was on in said pipe; that appellee was an inexperienced man, and was not familiar with the kind of work he was engaged upon at the time he was injured, and not familiar with the danger of working around a pipe joint while steam was on, and did not know that steam was on at the time he was at work; that appellant failed to warn him of the danger, and failed to furnish him with a safe place to work and safe appliances with which to work.
Appellant pleaded a general demurrer and several special exceptions, which need not be further referred to, and further pleaded the general issue, contributory negligence and assumed risk.
Conclusions of Fact.
At the time of the accident in question ap-pellee, a man 44 years of age, was in the employ of appellant in its paper mill. He was. a member of the “roustabout gang,” and seems to have been engaged in doing any kind of unskilled labor that was required to be done about the mill. His wages were $1.75 per day. Another member of the roustabout gang was W. A. Orr. Appellee was inexperienced in working about machinery, and not acquainted with the practical working and operation of steam and the dangers-of explosion in certain circumstances. One Becker was the foreman or boss of the roustabout gang. He had authority to direct the members of this gang in their work, but did' not have the power to hire or discharge the men. The mill had been closed down for several months, and they were preparing to-put it in operation again, and to this end were examining the steam pipe to discover-leaks, and stopping the same. For this purpose the steam was run into the pipes. Where the joints of the steam pipes come *911 together there were flanges on each end, which fitted close together, having a gasket between to enable them to be so closed up as to prevent the escape of steam. These joints were fastened together by means of holts through the flanges, which, when screwed up tight, brought the two ends of the pipes tightly together. On the morning of the accident Becker, in examining the pipes, discovered a loose bolt at one of these joints in a pipe some distance up from the floor, and directed appellee and Orr to fix it. He then went to another part of the mill. In screwing up this loose bolt, appellee held the end of the bolt with a wrench to keep it from turning, while Orr with another wrench screwed up the nut on the other end of the bolt. They had not been so engaged more than a minute or two when there was an explosion, which blew appellee through a window into an adjoining room, about 60 or 70 feet, breaking his leg and wrist, and scalding and otherwise very seriously injuring him. We find that the pipe was defective and unsafe under the steam pressure put upon it, chargeable to the negligence of appellant, and that this was the proximate cause of appellee’s injury. We further find that appellee’s injuries are of such a character as to justify the amount of the verdict and judgment. In finding these conclusions, we have followed the verdict of the jury in resolving conflicts in the evidence in favor of appellee.
“That the plaintiff was given until 1:30 p. m. to controvert the application for continuance, and when that hour came the witness W. A. Orr was in court, and counsel for plaintiff asked the witness, without being sworn, if he felt well enough to testify, and he replied, if he could do so at once, he might. Dr. Lawson was then present in court, and he was asked what' he thought about the witness testifying, and he replied, T would not say he could not testify if he was put on the stand at once, and not required to lie around the courthouse all day waiting.’ Mr. Holland, attorney for defendant, then asked the witness Orr how he felt, and the witness said he did not feel well, and would not have come but thought the court had sent for him, and he had to come; that his head hurt him all the time, and that he lay down most of the time, and that he could not remember everything well. After which the defendant renewed its motion to continue, because it claimed the witness was not physically and mentally able to testify. The court overruled the motion, to which the defendant excepted. The court told Mr. Orr that he need not sit around the courtroom unless he so desired, but he' would be sent for when needed; whereupon the case proceeded to trial, and when the plaintiff had rested his case he tendered the defendant the witness Orr, and stated he was in the courtroom and ready to testify. The counsel for defendant thanked him, and said they were running their part of the case, and declined to then use the witness Orr, but proceeded to put on the other witnesses. At or about the close of the defendant’s testimony the plaintiff again called the counsel’s attention to the presence of the witness Orr, and defendant put Dr. Lawson on the stand, and asked him the following question, ‘Is the witness (Orr) capable mentally of testifying in this case?’ which was objected to by the plaintiff, because the witness was in the courtroom, and could be observed by the court and jury. The objection was sustained, and the defendant’s' counsel, Mr. Holland, stepped to the stenographer, and in a low tone, so that the jury could not hear, stated that he expected to prove by the witness Dr. Lawson the following: ‘That he, Orr, is not mentally capable of testifying; that his mental condition is temporary, is caused by his physical condition, being sick at the present time and under his care, and he is able to be about, but that if put on the witness stand his nervous condition is such that at least he would1 answer questions in one way one time, and probably in another way at another time, and that he would not be responsible for his answers in any event.’ The doctor was then asked in a low tone if what he, Holland, had dictated was substantially his answer, and he answered, ‘Yes, substantially.’ None of this was to the jury. At this' point the defendant refused to put the witness Orr on the stand, and again renewed his motion to continue, although the witness was present, which was overruled, and the defendant duly excepted.
“After the defendant had rested his case, the plaintiff put the said witness W. A. Orr on the stand, and he testified clearly, distinctly, and intelligently, without objection on the part of the defendant because of his mental condition. After the plaintiff turned the witness over to the defendant, he was asked by Mr. Holland, attorney for defendant, ‘How do you feel physically?’ and with the help and suggestion of the counsel he made the following answer: ‘My head wanders. I cannot hold nothing. I cannot remember any detail as a result of my physical condition; at the present time I. could *912 not be responsible for anything I might say. I would get entirely off the subject, and say things I ought not to say, and forget things I ought to know.’ Mr. Holland declined to further cross-question the witness.
“I failed to note any mental incapacity about the witness; he answered every question put to him by the plaintiff without reflection or hesitation. At this point of the trial the plaintiff withdrew his objection to Dr. Lawson’s testifying, whereupon he, Lawson, was again put back on the stand, and the defendant’s counsel, Mr. Holland, read the statement that he, Holland, had made to his bill of exception, and which Dr. Lawson privily stated to him and the stenographer was substantially correct, before he had heard the witness testify. The plaintiff objected because it was leading and put in the mouth of the witness what he wantdd, and what he, Holland, had said, and not the witness. The objection was sustained, and the court told Mr. Holland he could interrogate the witness on the subject in the proper way, but that it was improper to ask him if what he, Holland, had appended to his bill of exception was or not true. Holland contended that plaintiff had withdrawn his objection, which was by the plaintiff admitted to be true; that he had withdrawn his objection to Dr. Lawson’s testifying to opinion of the physical and mental condition of the witness, but not to that what Mr. Holland had dictated was true. The court sustained the contention of the plaintiff, and Mr. Holland refused to ask the witness any further questions, and excepted to the ruling of the court.”
Many things come under the judge’s observation during the course of a trial which cannot be adequately reflected in the record, but which might properly influence the court in a matter of this kind. The facts peculiarly within the knowledge of this witness were necessarily few and simple. He and ap-pellee were at work on the pipe only two or three minutes at the longest. They were engaged in a very simple operation when the explosion came suddenly and unexpectedly. The witness testified as to part of this, and it appears to us that his testimony in the statement of facts was clear and intelligent. From the witness’ general appearance, his demeanor under examination as a witness, the unhesitating and intelligent manner with which he answered questions, notwithstanding his own testimony as to his physical and mental condition, the trial court concluded that there was no substantial reason why he should not be called on to give an account as a witness of the few and simple facts shown by the statement in the motion for continuance to be within his knowledge, and which were expected to be shown by him. We are asked to say that the court acted arbitrarily, unjustly, and outside of the discretion necessarily vested in a trial judge. We think it would be an abuse of the discretion vested in this court for us to so say. Instead of excusing the witness after appel-lee had examined him upon the witness’ naked statement as to his physical and mental condition, we think appellant should have then sought by proper questions as to the facts of the occurrence to show whether the witness could “give an intelligent account of them. If in fact he showed himself then physically and mentally incapable of doing so, this fact should not have escaped the discernment of an impartial court. We think the court did not commit reversible error in overruling the application for a continuance, and the first assignment of error must be overruled.
The ninth assignment of error is overruled without discussion. There is no merit to the objection presented to the charge.
By the tenth assignment of error objection is made to the third paragraph of the charge submitting the issue of negligence pleaded by appellee and presented by the evidence as to the defective pipe as the proximate cause of the injury to appellee. None of the objections to the charge set out in the assignment are tenable. None of the facts charged to have been assumed were in fact so assumed, though some of them might very well, without impropriety, have been assumed to be true, as they were established by the uncon-tradicted evidence, and there was no dispute about them; but the charge leaves them all to the decision of the jury, and affords no ground for criticism that it is “upon the weight'of the evidence.” The court does not instruct the jury that appellee could recover because of the acts of Becker, his immediate boss, but submits only the issue of negligence in the matter of defective pipe, with which *915 it is not pretended that Becker had anything to do. The assignment is overruled.
Our conclusions of fact afford sufficient answer to the thirteenth assignment, which complains of the refusal to instruct the jury to return a verdict for defendant. The evidence on the whole presents the issue of negligence of appellant in providing and using defective steam pipe not sufficient to withstand the steam pressure, causing the explosion.
Several special charges were given at the request of appellant, and by the fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth assignments of error appellant complains that the verdict is contrary to the law as laid down in these special charges. In connection with these charges we have examined very carefully the evidence upon the issues presented. We can only repeat, in answer to these assignments, that the evidence was sufficient to support the verdict, even under the principles of law, very favorable to appellant, stated in these special instructions. The assignments are severally overruled.
We have examined carefully the entire evidence in the record in connection with the several assignments of error. The ease was submitted to the jury in charges exceptionally favorable to appellant. We can see no just grounds for reversal, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Reference
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- Yellow Pine Paper Mill Co. v. Lyons.
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