Hendricks v. Lesure Lumber Co.
Hendricks v. Lesure Lumber Co.
Opinion of the Court
Appellant was operating a two-band sawmill, and respondent was employed on the night shift as a tail sawyer. The boards fell from the saw upon a series of rapidly moving live rollers, which carried them to their proper places in the mill. It was the duty of the tail sawyer to guide and assist the boards and slabs as they fell upon the live rolls, and to trip a lever with his foot, which had the effect 'of sending the proper boards to the resaw; and, in case one got too far down the-rolls, it was the custom to reverse the rolls and bring it back, if there was time, or, if not, then it passed on over the system of rolls, was piled up, and brought back later, when opportunity afforded. The rolls were nearly a foot in diameter, and set in a table about three feet wide. The gearings which propelled the rolls were all connected by a shaft, and were covered in the following manner: A plank two inches thick and seven or eight inches wide ran along the side of the table covering the ends of the gearings, and a similar piece was at the end of the table where the tail sawyer stood, but the gearings were uncovered at the bottom. The top covering consisted of a plank about a foot wide, and was unfastened. The gear at the end. of the first roll was located within a few inches from the end of the table, and consisted of two cogwheels, each five or six inches in diameter, meshing from the bottom, and, when the rolls were reversed, meshing from the top. The rolls were reversed or stopped by means of pulling out two or three inches a rod which extended along inside the box and projected at the end of the table.
Respondent stood at the end of the table while at work; the trip lever to send the boards to the resaw being near his right foot, and the end of the rod which reversed the rolls being near his left knee. Day and night sawyers were in charge, and it was their duty to determine the kind of boards logs should be cut into, and the disposition of the boards — whether they should take their course down the rolls, or be sent to the resaw by the tail sawyer. The sawyer communicated by means of signs with the carriage riders as to the sawing, and with the tail sawyer, directing the disposition of the boards under his control. As a general rule, the tail sawyer knew where to send the boards, and acted upon his own judgment, but he was under the supervision of the sawyer.
On the occasion of the accident the head sawyer noticed some boards going down the rolls which he wanted returned, and motioned to respondent to reverse the rolls and send them back. At that time the reversing rod had worked back so that he could not get hold of it, and he reached underneath the side of the table for the purpose of taking hold of the rod; and in so doing his hand came in contact with the gearing of the first roll, and was injured. Respondent recovered a verdict, and appellant’s liability was placed upon the following grounds: That the instrumentality furnished respondent for the purpose of reversing and controlling the rolls was defective and unsafe, and not suitable for the purpose required, and that the gearing was not properly protected.
The questions now open for discussion are: (1) Was the head sawyer a vice principal or fellow servant? (2) Was appellant negligent as charged? (3) If so, was respondent guilty of contributory negligence, or did he assume the risk, in attempting to manipulate the reversing rod as he did?
2. We receive the impression from the description of the gearings •and covering that for all practical and ordinary purposes they were properly covered and sufficiently protected, but it does not follow that, because under ordinary circumstances there was no negligence in this respect, appellant is relieved from, liability under the peculiar circumstances of this case. Admittedly, the reversing rod was defective. The handle by means of which it was operated was broken off, and upon occasion there was no way to pull it from the head of the table, where respondent stood in the performance of his duties. In this respect appellant was negligent in failing to provide a proper and safe appliance.
Judgment affirmed.
On July 22, 1904, the following opinion was filed:
Upon application for reargument, our attention having been called thereto, it appears that, through inadvertence, we assumed that the trial court submitted fo the jury the question whether the head sawyer was a vice principal. In that respect we were mistaken, the case having been finally submitted to the. jury upon two issues only: First, was appellant negligent in not furnishing safe and suitable appliances? and, second, was respondent guilty of contributory negligence?
The liability of appellant did not necessarily depend upon the relation existing between the head sawyer.and respondent, and it was not necessary to determine or discuss the question of fellow servant. The first proposition of the syllabus, and all that is said in the opinion with reference to the fellow-servant question, is accordingly withdrawn.
The decision in other respects is approved, and the motion for re-argument is denied.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.