80 F. 257 | 7th Cir. | 1897
John Erickson, the defendant in error, recovered judgment against the Dells Lumber Company, plaintiff in error, for personal injuries sustained in the employment of that company while operating a matcher in the company’s planing mill at Eau Claire, Wis.,—his foot having been caught and crushed between pulleys under that end of the machine near which he was required to be when operating it. The gist of the declaration is that the negligence of the company which caused the injury consisted in omitting to equip the matcher with a spring to hold the boards being matched against the guides, and in omitting to cover or guard the pulleys; that by reason of the absence of the spring the plaintiff was compelled to press with all his strength against the boards to keep them moving in a straight line under the knives; that, while so engaged, a board broke under his hand, causing him to fall and his foot to be caught between the revolving pulleys. When the evidence was all in, the plaintiff in error moved the court to direct a verdict in its favor, but the motion was denied. Whether that ruling was right is the chief question in the case, and its determination depends upon the inquiry whether the defendant in error should be regarded as having assumed the risk of injury from the unguarded pulleys. That the omission to cover the pulleys, or in some mode to guard the operator of the machine against danger from them, was a breach of the company’s duty to provide its employé a safe place in which to work is too clear for controversy; but it is contended that Erickson had become aware of the danger, and that by continuing in the service he assumed the risk. The accident occurred on Tuesday, and it appears that, on the Saturday next preceding, Erickson complained to John Bonk, whom he supposed to be the superintendent of the mill, about the condition of the matcher, and declared his purpose to quit work unless a spring was supplied and the pulleys covered, whereupon Bonk requested him not to quit, and promised that the spring should be supplied and the pulleys guarded. The promise, it is insisted, was not binding upon the company, and was unavailing to Erickson as an excuse for continuing to work under conditions of known danger, because Charles Charlesson, the foreman in the mill, was the one who had charge of the machinery, and determined what repairs and alterations should be made, while Bonk, instead of being the superintendent, was only a fellow servant of other employés, and possessed of no authority to promise that repairs or additions to the machinery of the mill should be made. Erickson testified that he believed Bonk to be the superintendent, and other witnesses asserted a like understanding. It is undisputed that Bonk had authority and was accustomed to hire and discharge the workmen employed in the planing mill. He hired Erickson and fixed his wages, as he did the wages of others, and there are other circumstances in evidence which tended to show that he exercised and had the authority of a superintendent. It was therefore a question for the jury, if the point were controlling, whether he was exceeding his powers when persuading Erickson to continue in a service for which, if he quit, another must have been employed. We are of opinion, however, that the important inquiry was not so much what authority did Bonk really possess, as what