Turner v. Manufacturing Company
Turner v. Manufacturing Company
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff, forty years old, once a widow and now again married, had / a verdict below, and the defendant appeals.
She sued two years after the event. She was a spare weaver, and had only begun tO' operate that loom the afternoon before the day of the accident, thought she had operated many looms at other mills, and had worked in mills all her life.
This mill was built in 1900, the looms were then installed, the accident occurred in February, 1910.
The cause of the injury was the “slamming” and then the starting up of a loom; and the character of the injury was said to be to- the plaintiff’s back and side, “due to’ muscular separation of one rib from another” * * * “an injury that *114 will grow back and permanently readjust itself in the course of time.” (Dr. Walker, for plaintiff.)
There are three exceptions, but they all relate to the refusal of the Court to grant a nonsuit, or to direct a verdict for the defendant: (1) for lack of proof by the plaintiff; (2) for the plaintiff’s negligence; (3) for the plaintiff’s assumption of the risk.
The accident occurred in this way: The weaver stands in front of his loom, ready to start it; on the right end of the loom there are two pulleys, one tight and one loose; a belt runs from these pulleys to the source of power; when the belt is on the loose pulley, the loom’s parts are motionless ; when the belt is on the tight pulley, the power is applied and the parts of the loom start to- move; the belt is shifted from one pulley to the other by the agency of a small lever, in easy and safe reach of the hand; on the left end of the loom is a small wheel, by the hand movement of which the weaver adjusts the harness, and by which also the shuttle, when the shuttle has stopped, may be pushed into one of its boxes; the shuttle must be in one of the boxes before the loom starts to move, s.o that one of the picker sticks may drive it to the box at the opposite end of the loom.
That is the plaintiff’s account of the event. That account does not show any defect in the looms. The only other evidence relied upon fo> show a defect, is that a loom fixer had' been called to that loom the afternoon before; and that all the looms in the mill, after eight years’ use and in the year after the event, were discarded and sold for junk. It does not appear that the loom fixer found any defect in the loom, much less the defect, if any, which is now complained of.. The loom fixer by common knowledge is called for many purposes, and his appearance, and that alone, at a machine is not evidence of a defect. His nonappearance could have been relied upon as neglect; but hardly his appearance.
If he appeared, the inference is that he remedied the defect, if there was one. There is no testimony to rebut that inference.
All the looms were removed, the inference if not warrant-able that all the looms had the defect here alleged; had this particular loom alone had been put out of the mill, there would be room to- conclude it was defective.
There was no evidence of a defect, and none of the master’s neglect.
The other exceptions, need not be considered, because they now become irrelevant.
The judgment is reversed and the complaint is dismissed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Annie Turner v. F. W. Poe Mfg. Co.
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published