104 Neb. 818 | Neb. | 1920
The plaintiff, Daniel C. Hellerich, brought this action against his employer, the defendant, Nebraska Elevator Company, to recover damages for personal injuries resulting from alleged negligence. In the answer to the petition, the defendant, in addition to a general denial, pleaded contributory negligence and assumption of risk. Upon a trial of the issues there was a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $28,900. As a condition of overruling the motion for a new trial, the district court ordered, and the plaintiff filed, a remittitur in the sum of $10,000. Prom a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $18,900, the defendant appeals.
The principal assignment of error is the failure of the trial court to sustain a motion by the defendant to direct a verdict in its favor on the ground that the evidence is insufficient to show negligence on its part or to sustain a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.
The engine is in a pit in a lean-to below the floor of the elevator, and the power is transmitted to a fast pulley on the line shaft by a horizontal engine belt. By means of a sprocket wheel on the line shaft under the elevator floor and a perpendicular endless chain, the power is transmitted to the sprocket wheel on the shaft in the elevator head, the elevator leg being 30 feet or more in height. In addition to the sprocket wheel on the line shaft and the fast pulley on the same shaft, there is a loose pulley. The engine is started by revolving a wheel on,the engine shaft. While the belt is on the loose pulley, the sprocket chain which turns the shaft in the elevator head does not move, though the engine is in motion. To start the sprocket chain and to revolve the sprocket wheel in the elevator head, it is necessary to shift the belt from tbe loose to the fast pullev. The shifting device is a belt shifter, and the one used by the
■ The theory of the plaintiff is that by reason of defects, growing out of negligence, the machinery was set in motion automatically or without direct human agency at the time he was injured. Under issues raised by the pleadings, the trial court submitted to the jury four allegations of negligence, namely: (1) The belt shifter was defective and would not keep the belt on the loose pulley; (2) a rest hook to keep the belt away from the shafting Avas required by statute but not furnished; (3) the defendant permitted the engine to run while the plaintiff was at work in a hazardous position; (4) the plaintiff was not provided with a reasonably safe place to Avork.
In the argument by the defendant it is insisted that there is no evidence to sustain a finding in favor of the plaintiff on any issue submitted to the jury, and that a failure of proof on any one of them requires a reversal.
On the contrary, the defendant insists that inferences of negligence in view of other evidence do violence to unquestioned physical conditions, to natural laws, and to the laws of mechanics as shoAvn by uncontradicted evidence. The defendant argues that there can be no reasonable difference of opinion on these issues, and that the jury should not have been allowed to indulge in mere speculation as to the, proximate cause of the acci
On the evidence as a whole, it is argued by the defendant that there is no reasonable hypothesis on which testimony that no one set the machinery in motion is believable; that the defendant did not know and could not have discovered by ordinary care any defect which could cause the belt to shift to the fast pulley of its own accord; that the accident could not have been foreseen by any degree of diligence on the part of the defendant. ;
There is testimony, however, that the belt shifter had in fact been used by the defendant to keep the belt in place when the machinery was in motion, and that in pursuance of such a purpose it had been fastened in a stationary position at different times; that the crown on the loose pulley was increased subsequent to the accident; that the experts made their tests after the change; that the load on the engine when the tests were made was heavier than the load at the time of the accident. This leaves the issue in doubt with sufficient proof on each side.
It seems to folloAV that the tests and the testimony of the experts in connection with the proofs as a whole do not amount to a demonstration that the accident did not result from the automatic shifting of the belt, and, there being sufficient evidence in faAmr of the plaintiff on this point, there was no error in submitting the issue to the jury. On the questions of the plaintiff’s assumption of risk, of his contributory negligence, and of the defendant being chargeable Avith knowledge of conditions, the evidence justifies the verdict rendered.
Complaint is also made of the recovery as excessive after the amount was reduced by remittitur from $28,900 to $18,900. When injured, the plaintiff was a robust man 28 years of age. lie testified he had been earning $200 a month as a live stock buyer and shipper. He was in the hospital 14 weeks, suffered intense pain, and underwent four surgical operations. He lost his right arm, and at the time of the'trial the bones of his left arm had not united. On these facts we do not think the judgment is so excessive as to require a reversal or an additional remittitur.
The plaintiff appealed from the order requiring him to file a remittitur in the sum of $10,000 as a condition of overruling the motion for a new trial. The right to file a remittitur conforming to an order of the trial court and afterward to assail the order as erroneous is granted by statute. Laws 1915, ch. 247. Where the trial court orders a remittitur, there must be a substantial
Affirmed.