75 N.Y.S. 610 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
Lead Opinion
The defendant in this action was engaged in the operation of a paper mill at Niagara Falls in this State, and the plaintiff was at work at the time of the accident in installing some new machinery in the mill. On the morning of the 8th of Jane, 1900, the plaintiff was caught hy a revolving shaft and severely injured, and it is to recover for such injuries that this action was brought. The complaint alleged as the negligence of which the defendant was charged, that the “ shafting and machinery were not constructed or protected in accordance with law, and that the * * * (set) screw and the sprocket wheel adjoining said screw1 upon said shafting were not protected as provided by law, and it did not constitute a safe place or safe tools and machinery to this plaintiff as the law provides, and that the defendant was negligent and careless in not furnishing safe tools, implements and machinery, and not protecting the same, and not furnishing a safe place in which to perform the work he was obliged to perform, and that said place was defective by reason of its not being properly lighted, all of which caused or contributed to the cause of the injuries hereinbefore set forth.”
The plaintiff testified that he was at work in the mill on Sunday, January 7, 1900, and continued at work until the time of the injury, which was between four and five o?clock the next (Monday) morning; that just before the accident he was at work at the top of the building, sawing off a steel shaft; that a Mr. Shedd, who was in the employ of the defendant, called to him to come down to the cellar to throw a belt on the shaft; that on his going to the cellar, Mr. Shedd was standing at the loose, end of the shaft and said, “ Let’s throw this belt on.” This belt was on a loose pulley, and the object was to pull it onto a pulley fast to the revolving shaft, by which motion would be communicated to the machinery on the floor above. The plaintiff took hold of the belt to pull it on to this pulley so that the motion of the shaft would roll it over, but in some way the belt slipped, and as it slipped the plaintiff stepped back against the shaft, and a sprocket wheel, or the set screws that held the sprocket wheel to the shaft, caught in his clothes and drew Mm
On behalf of the defendant, the master mechanic, Jones, testified that this sprocket wheel was fastened to the shafting by keys and set screws, and that it was to be guarded by a framework around it, leaving a slit for the chain to go through when the machinery was
Upon this evidence, the court stated that this shaft was a. permanent structure ; that the duty of the defendant under the Factory Act to protect and guard this sprocket wheel had already accrued, and that it was in the failure, to guard it that the neglect, if any, consisted which makes the defendant liable. The defendant moved to dismiss the complaint and direct a verdict for the defendant on various grounds, one of which. was that there was nothing in the case which would bring it within the provisions of . the Factory Act, This motion was denied and the defendant excepted.. The judge then charged the jury that the “ duty to guard dangerous machinery is a duty which is prescribed by statute. * * * Now, there is a law which requires the guarding of certain machinery such as this. We can confine our attention here to this sprocket wheel, because it is the sprocket wheel only that is in question. You needn’t bother about the pulleys or the absence of a loose pulley at all. That has ■nothing to do with the case. The question is just, a question of the danger. which caused the accident — the danger of a. revolving sprocket wheel with projecting teeth and projecting set screws. That is the danger which is in question here, and the only negligence of the defendant in .this case, if there is any foundation for a verdict against it, is their failure to so guard that sprocket wheel as to-make it reasonably safe. I don’t say that they were even bound to-so guard it as to make it reasonably safe, but they were bound to exercise ordinary ' care to that end. Did they exercise any care to that end here ? It wasn’t housed in any manner, and to anyone who gets close to .it it presents all the dangers which are inherent in its construction. * * * The real question about it is, was that sprocket guarded as due care required to avoid injuring the man who should come into the neighborhood of it to put that belt
Counsel for the defendant called the attention of the court to this charge, saying: “ Your Honor charged the jury, as I understood it, that the time had come when, if ever, the sprocket had to be guarded.” To which the court answered, “ Yes,” and to that the defendant excepted. The court then replied: “ By that I mean * * * that this appliance had been installed and put to work about the business of the factory, and although there were to be some further extensions on it and connections with it, that is immaterial. This part, this sprocket wheel was revolving upon a shaft which was doing the work —the ordinary work — of the factory.” The counsel for the defendant excepted to this statement to the jury, and asked the court to charge that “ this sprocket wheel was not at this time in actual operation, and that the duty of guarding it and caring for it was modified by the fact that it had not been put into use.” This the court refused, and the defendant excepted, to which the court replied: “ The fact that it has not been put in use is immaterial ; the significant fact is that it was upon the shaft which was being moved about the business of the factory and not experimentally.”
The negligence of' the defendant was thus based upon a failure to comply with the requirements of the Labor Law (Laws of 1897, chap. él5, § 81) which provides : “ The owner or person in charge of a factory where machinery is used shall provide * ■* * belt-
The duty imposed by this statute was considered by the Court of Appeals in Glens Falls Portland Cement Co. v. Travelers' Insurance Co. (162 N. Y. 399). Commenting upon a similar clause of the Factory Act (Laws of 1886, chap. 409, § 8, as amd. by Laws of 1892, chap. 673), Judge Haight says: “ The manifest purpose of the enactment was doubtless to give more force to the existing rule that masters should afford a reasonably safe place in which their servants are called upon to work. We think, however, that the Legislature could not have intended that every piece of machinery in a large building should be covered or guarded. * * * What evidently was intended was that those parts of the machinery which were dangerous to the servants whose duty required them to work in its immediate vicinity should be properly guarded, so as to minimize, as far as practicable, the dangers attending their labors,”
In this case we have an employee engaged not in operating machinery in the conduct óf a manufactory, but in installing new machinery in a factory. The particular work on which the plaintiff was engaged was in connecting a new shaft with new machinery. This particular portion of the shaft upon which the plaintiff was at work had never been used, and the belt that was then being attached was part of the new machinery that was being installed. The sprocket wheel which was attached to this shaft had not been used ; and although one witness says that all this shafting had been up about three weeks and the shaft had been used in connection with the work- of the factory for one week, the construction work on the shaft was. still in progress. The portion upon which' the plaintiff was at work and that caught his clothes and caused the injury was uncompleted, and it was while he was attaching this new shaft to the other new machinery that the plaintiff was injured. The plaintiff, when he assisted in- this work, understood that he was at work on an uncompleted shaft. The whole shafting was in the cellar of the building, not frequented by the regular employees of
There were several other questions presented by the record which present serious questions, but in view of the conclusion at which we have arrived upon this question, it is not necessary that they should be determined.
It follows that the judgment below and the order denying a new trial must be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Yak Brunt, P. J., and Hatch, J., concurred; O’Brien, J., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting):
Evidence was presented from which the jury might have inferred negligence upon the part' of the defendant not only in violating the Labor Law (Laws of 1897, chap. 415, § 81), but in not providing within a reasonable time guards to the machinery and a belt shifter and in directing the plaintiff to work in a place which was not safe.
And there was also evidence to support the finding that the plaintiff was free from contributory negligence. He was a laborer and was not, therefore, as well able to determine the risks, excepting
My conclusion is that the plaintiff made out a prima facie case of negligence, and the issues having been properly submitted to the jury, the verdict should not be disturbed. I, therefore, dissent from the majority of the court, thinking as I do, that the judgment should be affirmed.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.