Allen v. S. H. Bolinger & Co.
Allen v. S. H. Bolinger & Co.
Opinion of the Court
This is a suit for damages for personal injuries. Plaintiff was the foreman of defendant’s planing mill, and while in the discharge of his duties as such suffered a loss of two fingers, which were cut off by the knives of the planing machine. One of the component parts of this machine was a blower pipe, which served the purpose of carrying off the chips and shávings cut from the planks, and conveying them to the furnace of the plant. This pipe was suspended above the machine, and terminated in a hood made of sheet iron, which spread out over the cylinders and knives used to cut the planks, and rested on what is called a chip brake. The blower pipe was jointed together, and the joint immediately attached to the hood worked up in the pipe above it, so that the hood could be raised or lowered according to the thickness of the planks passing through the machine. This joint is called a “slip joint,” and when in proper condition the chip brake, when raised, would raise the hood, and then the hood would follow the chip brake back down into place when the plank was taken out, or when a thinner plank was inserted, and continue to rest upon the chip brake. If the hood was in proper condition and fitted the machine, it would not come into contact with the knives when it would drop back with the chip brake. A rope, and pulley were ordinarily used for the purpose of raising and lowering the hood when occasion required.
Plaintiff contends that the hood in question was too small, and the slip joint was defective; the result being that the hood, instead of following the chip brake down, would hang suspended above the cylinders, and at times in descending would miss the
On the occasion of the injury, the workman at the machine put in two planks, one of which had a feather edge, and the consequence was that the second plank overlapped the first, and caused the chip brake to rise, and the chip brake carried the hood with it, and pushed the end of the hood three or four inches into the slip joint. When the workman backed the board out, the hood stayed in the slip joint, which went back to its proper place. Thereupon the plaintiff caught the hood in both hands, and held it, to keep it from dropping into the knives. Plaintiff took his right hand off to signal the workman to close down the machinery, and when he did so the hood dropped twice upon the knives and rebounded, when plaintiff grabbed at it, and got it between his hands; but the force was so great that his right hand was pushed on the knives and badly cut up. Plaintiff’s effort was to hold the hood until the workman could close down the machinery. The plaintiff and the workman both testified that the hood came down on the knives because it was too small to cover the cylinders. At the time of- the accident, there was no rope on the pulley intended for raising and lowering the hood as occasion required. The fact was unknown to counsel on both sides, until it was developed on cross-examination of the plaintiff, who further testified that the rope formerly used had worn out, and he had ordered a new one through the defendant’s commissary store, but the same had not been furnished up to the time of the accident. It is also shown that about a month prior to the date of the injury the plaintiff called the attention of the manager to the ' defective condition of blower pipes generally, and of the one over the woodworking machine in particular, and the manager promised to have all of them repaired as soon as business picked up.
As soon as he was able to work, the plaintiff was reinstated in his position as foreman, and remained in the employ of the defendant for several months.
The defenses are assumption of risks, negligence of plaintiff, and contributory negligence.
The defendant was depending on the plaintiff to take all proper precautions to keep the machinery in good running order, and the plaintiff cannot excuse himself for operating the same improperly without showing that he was forced to do so by the laches of the defendant.
It is therefore ordered that the verdict and judgment be reversed, and it is now ordered that plaintiff’s suit be dismissed, with costs in both courts.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ALLEN v. S. H. BOLINGER & CO., Limited
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by the Court.) 1. Master and Servant (§ 262*) — Trial (§ 76*) — Contributory Negligence — Objection to Evidence. A general averment of contributory negligence in the operation of certain machinery is sufficient; objection to evidence after it has gone to the jury comes too late. [Ed. Note. — Por other cases, see Master and Servant, Cent. Dig. § 859; Dec. Dig. § 262;* Trial, Cent. Dig. §§ 183-190; Dec. Dig. § 76.*] 2. Master and Servant (§§ 233, 236*) — Injury to Servant — Defective Appliances— Contributory Negligence. The foreman of a planing mill cannot hold his employer responsible for injuries resulting from his own negligence in operating machinery without a proper appliance, which could have been procured by the foreman with due diligence. Nor can such foreman hold his employer liable for an injury resulting from doing work without a proper appliance, where such injury could have been avoided by turning off the power operating the machine. [Ed. Note. — Eor other cases, see Master and Servant, Cent. Dig. §§ 681, 684M386, 723-742; Dec. Dig. §§ 233, 236.*]