Alpha Portland Cement Co. v. Corsi
Opinion of the Court
The action is brought under a Pennsylvania statute allowing such action to be brought by the parents of a person killed by negligence. Deceased on the day in question was engaged in oiling machinery in the mill. He met his death by coming in contact with a revolving shaft containing a collar and a set screw, which were wholly unguarded. The Pennsylvania Factory Act (P. L. c. 226, § 11, May 2, 1905) provides that:
“All vats, pans, saws, planers, cogs, gearing, belting, shafting, set screws, grindstones, emery wheels, flywheels, and machinery of every description shall be properly guarded.”
The particular machine was one of a series run by electricity; it could be readily stopped merely by pressing a button convenienty located on the floor below the platform. Such temporary disconnection would not interfere with the rest of the plant. The testimony for defendant tended to show that to all, including deceased, instructions had been given, forbidding any one from undertaking to oil the machinery until after he had shut it down by cutting off the electric current, which ran it ; also that deceased had on one occasion repeated these instructions to another man, who was about to take his place temporarily. Plaintiff in error relies on our decisions in Canadian Pacific R. R. v. Elliot, a cause which came twice before this court. 137 Fed. 904, 70 C. C. A. 242; 161 Fed. 250, 88 C. C. A. 286. It may be noted that in the Elliot Case the controversy was whether the rule had been so frequently and notoriously disregarded as to have become a dead letter. Of the promulgation of the rule there was not a particle of doubt. In its original or amended form (the amendment making it moré efficient to insure safety) it had been in force for years. It was printed and' included in the book of rules with which the deceased had been supplied and a copy of which was found on his body.
It is not necessary to state the facts in the case at bar more fully. While we think that plaintiff’s case was a weak one, and are inclined to put little reliance on the testimony of their main witness, Read, nevertheless, with his evidence in the case, there was conflict as to vital issues, which could not be táken from the jury. He testified that he never knew the machinery to be stopped for the purpose of oiling during the entire eight years it was there; that he never knew of any orders being given to stop it for the purpose of oiling, nor of any custom or practice to stop it for that purpose; that he had seen it oiled while in operation repeatedly. There was also testimony that, in order to find out if oiling was necessary, one would have to go to it and feel if the bearings were hot. The witness’who testified that deceased told him always to shut down before oiling was a Hungarian, who testified through an interpreter; deceased was an Italian, and the record is somewhat vague as to how the one communicated instructions to the other.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ALPHA PORTLAND CEMENT CO. v. CORSI et ux.
- Status
- Published