Court Opinion

ID: 3386482
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 18:41:41.94851+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:02:43.278408
License: Public Domain

Edward H. Sheeran recovered judgment in the Circuit Court for Dade County against M. F. Comer Bridge  Foundation Company, a corporation, in the sum of ten thousand dollars in an action for damages for personal injuries.
The defendant in the case seeks to reverse the judgment in this Court on writ of error.
In November, 1929, a bridge was under construction near Indian Creek and Forty-first Street in Miami Beach, Dade County, Florida. The Comer Bridge  Foundation Company had the contract for the construction of the bridge. Edward H. Sheeran was an employee of the Company as superintendent in charge of the construction work on this particular job. He had been on that work about two months and the structure was about half completed.
An abutment to the bridge was under construction at the time of the accident. A cofferdam had been constructed and the workmen were removing the middle set of timbers from it. For that purpose a derrick was used, operated by a three drum hoisting engine and all resting upon a barge which was anchored to the southward on the cofferdam.
Mr. Sheeran stood upon the railing of the cofferdam; that is to say, upon the heavy timbers lying along the edge of the cofferdam placed there to prevent it from collapsing from the outside water pressure. In that position he directed the movement of the derrick which was operated by another employee on the barge. At a signal from Mr. Sheeran the arm of the derrick would be swung by the operator of the machine over the cofferdam, a cable with hooks would be dropped into the cofferdam, in which another *Page 545 
employee, also under Mr. Sheeran's direction, was stationed whose duty it was to attach the hooks to the timber. Then upon a signal from Mr. Sheeran the timber would be slowly lifted and swung by the derrick to a point some distance from the bridge and to the west of the barge as Mr. Sheeran directed.
That process of removing the timbers from the cofferdam was being executed. The derrick on Mr. Sheeran's signal had swung over the cofferdam, the cable had been dropped and fastened by the workman to the particular timber, the signal had been given by Mr. Sheeran to remove it and it had been lifted clear of the cofferdam and swung around to the point where it was to have been released and deposited on the ground. Mr. Sheeran then turned his back to the derrick boom and was leaning forward over the cofferdam to instruct the workman stationed in there as to the next piece of timber to be removed, but due to some mishap the timber, which weighed about three hundred and fifty pounds and which had been lifted from the cofferdam, was not released from the cable of the derrick's boom, but was swung back again toward the cofferdam. The heavy timber swinging from the chain of the derrick struck Sheeran in the back, hurling him forward into the cofferdam, where he fell upon irons and timber constituting part of the structure, causing serious and painful bodily injuries to himself.
He brought an action for damages against the Corporation, his employer. The declaration contains three counts. The two first charge the defendant with the negligent operation of the hoisting machine. The third count as amended presents the plaintiff's case, if any at all exists. It alleges in substance that it was the duty of the defendant to supply a hoisting machine or derrick properly equipped *Page 546 
and suitable for the purpose to which it was put; that the defendant failed in that duty in that a brake contrivance with which the machine was equipped was permitted to get in bad condition; that the brake had some relation to the function of releasing the grappling hooks so that when the brake by reason of its defective condition stuck on the drum around and from which it was alternately wound and unwound, the grappling hooks would not be released and the load then being carried on the cable would not be discharged or deposited where it was intended to be, so on the occasion on which Sheeran was injured the brake, due to its defective condition, stuck, the timber, which was then swinging from the cable, was not released but suspended at the cable's end, swung back to the cofferdam, striking Mr. Sheeran and producing the injuries described in the declaration.
The transcript discloses that certain amended and additional pleas presented the defense to the plaintiff's alleged cause of action. The first amended plea was the plea of not guilty and the second amended plea tendered the issue of contributory negligence. It is averred that the timber was being removed under orders and directions of the plaintiff as superintendent in charge of the work of construction and that he failed to observe due care for his own safety by watching the operations of the machine in the process of removing the timber.
The additional pleas were interposed to the third amended count. The sixth additional plea to that count was not guilty. The third plea set up the defense that the plaintiff's failure to inspect the machinery as his duties required of him was the proximate cause of his injury; the fourth tendered the defense of assumption of risk from the negligence of a co-employee, the co-employee being the person *Page 547 
in charge of and operating the hoisting machine. The fifth plea averred that the plaintiff was defendant's vice-principal, that all persons on the work and all activities were under the direction and control of the plaintiff as supervisor and manager and plaintiff's injury was due to his own inefficient and careless management. The seventh plea tendered the same defense to the amended third count as the second amended plea tendered to the first and second counts of the declaration. Demurrers to the pleas were overruled and the cause went to trial upon the issues tendered by the pleas.
Upon the conclusion of the testimony the court of its own motion withdrew plea numbered five from consideration by the jury, on the ground that it was inapplicable and that there was no evidence to support it. That plea set up the defense that the plaintiff was the defendant's vice-principal; that all the employees engaged on the work and all machinery used were under the direct management, supervision and control of the plaintiff and that the plaintiff carelessly neglected to properly direct the activities of the persons working under him, particularly the operator of the derrick, and such carelessness on the plaintiff's part in the discharge of his duties was the proximate cause of his injury.
That order was made the basis of the fifth assignment of error.
The question is discussed in the brief on the theory that a superintendent in charge of a work upon whom devolves the duty of controlling and directing the activities of all employees engaged with him and who had control of the management of the machinery used in the operations is precluded from recovering damages from his employer in case of injury resulting to him from his failure to give *Page 548 
proper instruction to the employee under him or from no efficient inspection of the condition of the machinery producing the injury and being used on that work.
That that principle of law is sound is hardly open to discussion. As superintendent in charge of the particular work, he was supposed to have known the mechanism of the instrument used to remove the timber from the cofferdam and understand its operation. If he carelessly permitted a defective or inefficient piece of machinery to be used and by his signals directing its use actually employed it his negligence cannot be ascribed to his employer when he is the injured person. See Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Ryland, 50 Fla. 190, 40 South. Rep. 24; Long v. Pughsley, 80 Fla. 278, 85 South Rep. 664.
There was evidence in the record tending to show that Sheeran was the superintendent in charge of the work. Such was his own testimony and that statement was confirmed by the testimony of an official of the corporation which employed him. It was his duty to direct the work and equipment. It was attempted to be shown that he had full charge of the equipment, but the question was stricken on objection by plaintiff's counsel without any statement of the ground of the objection. The witness, LeSeur, for the plaintiff, had testified that it was his duty to inspect the machinery and keep it in repair and that he was under his "own direction." The question stricken sought to elicit information from the vice-president of the Corporation in positive contradiction of the testimony of LeSeur.
Obviously if LeSuer had the complete management and control of the machine and so carelessly and negligently disregarded his duty to keep it in suitable condition to do the work required of it as he seemed to be so willing to *Page 549 
swear and thus acknowledge his own unfaithfulness and incompetence as a servant of the Company, then the cause of the accident, if indeed the sticking of the brake caused it, could not be attributed to Sheeran, but if on the other hand Sheeran had full and complete control and management of the machine on that work it was his duty to know whether in its then condition it was suitable for the work required of it, and if such being his duty he exhibited the same degree of careless and negligent inattention to it as LeSuer seemed to admit marked the standard of his efficiency why then, of course, Sheeran could not recover on the cause stated by the third count of the declaration.
The order withdrawing the fifth plea from consideration by the jury was harmful error and operated greatly to the damage of the defendant.
The mechanism of the hoisting machine was not clearly explained. It is not at all apparent from the evidence why the sticking of the brake on the No. 2 drum should cause the boom with its load swinging from the end of a cable to swing back in a different arc of transit toward the point where the load was taken on without some assistance from the unclear Mr. Canady from whose testimony he seemed to desire it to be inferred that a machine like that had a mysterious and erratic way of performing when a brake on one of the drums which he chose to use was badly worn. Why he chose to use that particular drum and did not utilize the drum for controlling the boom when he saw that the stick of timber was not going to be released is not explained by him. It does not follow that by any law of mechanics the boom with its load of timber would swing back on a different arc, or swing back at all for that matter, upon the failure of the timber to be deposited at the point to which the operator of the machine directed it without *Page 550 
some assistance or impetus given to it either by the person operating the machine or the lilt of the barge on which the machinery was placed.
A full explanation of the matter might amount to more than a mild adverse criticism of Mr. Canady's efficiency, which his meager explanation and semi-technical phrases, such as "boomed down my boom," were not entirely sufficient to establish.
If the accident to Mr. Sheeran was in fact due to the clumsiness or inefficiency or even malice of Canady, the engineer in charge of operating the derrick, it should be made to appear with a reasonable degree of clearness. It cannot be assumed that it was his carelessness which caused the accident, nor can it be assumed that it was caused by the sticking of the brake on drum No. 2 which if it did in some way not explained cause the timber to remain suspended in the air from the end of a cable over the spot where it was intended to be deposited did not force the boom to carry the load back to the point where it was taken on.
It is not a case of res ipsa loquitur. A worn brake, a defective cable drum on a derrick machine, does not of itself account for the somewhat unusual, not to say mysterious, behavior of the derrick boom. Mr. Canady's statement that the "brake just wore down until it just got to stick against the metal — that is the only thing I can see," seems not to be quite sufficient as an explanation of why the boom cable on failing to deposit the timber on the ground should swing back to the point where the timber was taken on, or why the engineer who could control the boom by his machinery permitted it to swing back.
If he was guilty of either carelessness or malice and the accident proceeded from either cause developed after the *Page 551 
machine failed to deposit the timber on the land the plaintiff might recover on either the first or second count of the declaration, but there is no evidence to support any such theory.
There is a lack of evidence tending to establish a casual relation between the worn brake and the accident which is necessary to exist in order to maintain the case on the third count even if the jury should believe that the self-condemned Mr. LeSuer and not Mr. Sheeran was in complete control and management of the equipment, while no recovery could be sustained under the first and second counts in the absence of a showing that Mr. Canady unskillfully or carelessly managed the machinery.
The doctrine of the last clear chance might be considered as possibly applicable because Mr. Canady after realizing that the timber could be lowered to the ground, but remained swinging from the end of the boom might have by proper manipulation of his machine prevented the boom from swinging back toward the point where it originally took on the load and thus avoided the accident, which if he failed to do might have established the charge of careless manipulation of the machinery.
For the error committed by the trial court in eliminating the fifth plea the judgment is reversed and a new trial ordered.
Reversed.
TERRELL, BROWN and BUFORD, J. J., concur.
DAVIS, C. J., and WHITFIELD, J., dissent.
                   ON PETITION FOR REHEARING.