163 Ind. 135 | Ind. | 1904
Appellant sued the appellee to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received by the negligence of the latter. Appellee is engaged in the manufacture of freight and passenger-cars, and, among many other machines and appliances, has a device for crushing old car wheels preparatory to melting and remoulding, which device, or machine, is constructed as follows: There are four upright heavy timber posts set in a'square of ten feet, twenty-five feet high, slightly inclined to the center point at the top. At the top is constructed a heavy frame of wood and iron, upon which is a heavy pulley and certain wheels, connected with chains and ropes, one of the latter, and which passes over the pulley, is attached to a 1,500-pound steel hammer, resting upon the center of the floor within said posts, and another is attached to a machine on the floor, and receives from it compressed a,ir power, which propels the wheel and pulley at the top of said posts, and which, in turn, lifts the hammer to the top of the structure. Then, after a car wheel has been placed on the floor immediately under the hammer, the latter is disengaged, by jerkiDg a rope, and let fall with great force upon the wheel, breaking and crushing the same. To prevent fragments of the broken wheel from being thrown off and about the building, the company had constructed about the bottom, of heavy boards, and from post to post, a guard or incasement eight' feet high, but jhad not covered any part of the top, although it might have .covered it-fully except.three feet square in the center for .passage of -the hammer without impairing ;the.operating .convenience or utility of the machine.or device. :ln operating the drop, pieces of the ’broken wheel weighing -from ■dour to five pounds would now and thembe, thrown put ovqr ¡the fop of the incasement to a distance of fifteen totweptyffive feet beyond. The plaintiff had been in the -employ .of the company for more than a year, had frequently , operated the drop, and for several months jhad knowp that
All the foregoing facts are alleged in the complaint, and the negligence charged in the first paragraph is the failure to put a top on the guard or incasement, and in the second paragraph, the failure to construct the incasement high enough. Answer,- the general denial. Trial by jury, and with the general verdict for appellant the jury returned answers to interrogatories. The court sustained appellee’s motion for judgment on the special findings, and the correctness of this ruling is the only question for decision.
The facts specially found by the jury, are these: When the descending hammer struck a car wheel, broken pieces thereof, weighing four or five pounds, sometimes flew out over the top of the casing to a distance of fifteen to twenty-five feet. The plaintiff had for several months assisted in operating the drop, and knew that the incasement was not covered, and that the hammer was liable to throw out over the top such pieces of iron as caused his injury, and, some time before he was hurt, informed the foreman that it Was dangerous to operate the machine without a cover over the atqp. The sum of these things is that the falling drop was liable do cast harmful pieces .of iron over the-top off the ¡protecting .walls, and appellant continued in the employment after he ha’d notice of the danger.
Appellant contends that the court erred in holding that .these special facts overthrew the general verdict, which was in Jfis favor, for twC Reasons: (1) Because ..a .contiqu
It is clear that appellant does not base the action, upon his employer’s neglect to perform a common law duty, since he wholly fails to negative knowledge of the danger. It is, however, now the settled law of this State that the legislature may, in its discretion, with a view to the greater safety and protection of laborers, set up definite standards of duty to be observed by employers in providing working places for their employes, which are uncontrolled by the rules of the common law. Davis Coal Co. v. Polland (1902), 158 Ind. 607, 92 Am. St. 319; Monteith v. Kokomo, etc., Co. (1902), 159 Ind. 149, 58 L. R. A. 944. The effect of these cases is, when the legislature has prescribed specific measures for the proper fitting of a working place, it is a duty which the employer owes to his employe to provide the very means pointed out. Eothing different will exonerate, however better it may seem to him. The law is predicated upon the interest the State has in preserving the health, bodies, and lives of its citizens. Hence the workman has no power, either to excuse a compliance with the statute, or bind himself with an agreement to assume the risk of noncompliance. See Davis Coal Co. v. Polland, supra.
It is not claimed by appellee that appellant was wanting-in due care at the time of his injury, further than is shown generally by his continuance in the employment after knowledge of the hazard to be apprehended from the drop.
1. The statute referred to is section nine of the act of 1899 (Acts 1899, p. 231), the title to which, in part, is in these words: “An act concerning labor, and providing means for protecting the liberty, safety and health of laborers, providing for its enforcement,” etc. Section nine, so far as relates to our subject, provides that, “all vats, pans, saws, planers, cogs, gearing, belting, shafting, set screws and machinery of every description therein [manufacturing, etc., establishments] shall be properly guarded, and no person shall remove' or make ineffective any safeguard around or attached to any planer, saw, belting, shafting or other machinery, * * * while the same is in use, unless for the purpose of immediately making repairs thereto, and all such safeguards shall be promptly replaced.” The federal Supreme Court in Corning v. Burden (1853), 15 How. 252, 14 L. Ed. 683, has defined a “machine” as follows : “The term machine includes every mechanical device or combination of mechanical powers and devices to perform some function and produce a certain effect or result.” Accepting this as a correct definition of a machine, or machinery, and the device, or combination of devices, for crushing car wheels, described in the complaint, comes so clearly within the definition as to forbid argument. It follows that appellee, being a manufacturer, and using said machine in its manufacturing establishment, owed to its -workmen the certain and fixed duty of properly guarding fit. The nonfulfillment of this duty involves a violation of •the statute, and can not therefore be made the subject of -contract, by which the duty may be laid aside, changed, or modified, or the risk of nonperformance assumed by the operating employe.
It is alleged in the complaint that dangerous pieces of iron, and the one that injured the plaintiff, were thrown out over the top of the guard, which was but eight feet high and uncovered. And that the same might have been covered, except a space three feet square in the center for passage of the dropping hammer, without affecting the usefulness or convenience in operating the machine, and the danger to operatives' thereby removed, or greatly diminished. These averments presented the question as to whether the machine was properly guarded, and we must assume, in support of the general verdict, that the jury determined it in the negative. We must likewise assume, and for a like purpose, that, upon all the proved facts appellant was free from legal fault, and that his injuries resulted in the manner alleged in the complaint.
The appeal must be sustained. Judgment reversed, with
The death of appellant since the submission of this appeal having been suggested, it is ordered that the judgment of reversal shall bear date as of the day of submission.