45 Ind. App. 627 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1910
The appellee brought this action to recover for a personal injury suffered by him while in the employ of appellant in its match factory. There were three paragraphs of the complaint. Judgment was rendered in favor of the appellant on the first and third paragraphs and against it upon the second paragraph.
The overruling of appellant’s motion xor judgment in its favor upon the second paragraph, on the special findings of the jury in answer to interrogatories, notwithstanding the general verdict, is assigned as error, as is also the overruling of its motion for a new trial.
In support of the motion for judgment on the answers to interrogatories, it is insisted that while the second paragraph of complaint charges two several negligent acts of appellant as having jointly, by their combined effect, produced the injury, it appears by the answers to the interrogatories that only one of such negligent acts was the proximate cause. The second paragraph is very long, and includes a description of a machine not easily described briefly. Appellee was in charge of a“ dipping machine, ’ ’ by means of which the heads Avere put upon the matches by passing crates containing upright sticks, or matches without heads, betAveen two rollers, from one of which the sticks received the composition constituting the match heads. It was proper and necessary for the person operating the machine occasionally to remove with his hand from the receptacle the splinters and pieces of wood dropped as the crate passed betAveen the rollers, for which purpose it avrs necessary to stop the
The machine was constructed with a gearing connecting it with a large sproeket-wheel, and the complaint alleges that the machine had what is known as a square notched clutch gearing, and that by means of a lever and a square notched clutch the gearing could be pushed backward and forward, throwing the machine in or out of gear as the operator chose; that the gearing had attached thereto a perpendicular iron bar running from the lower portion of the clutch to a horizontal bar which was attached to the lower portion of the lever used in throwing the machine in or out of gear; that the gearing was negligently constructed, in that the horizontal bar which connected the lever with the perpendicular bar was too short, and by reason thereof when the lever operating the gearing was pulled out, in order to throw the machine out of gear, the lever would drop past the center, thereby throwing the machine in gear.
The complaint further alleged “that said notched clutch gearing which defendant had on said machine for the purpose of throwing it in and out of gear, when properly constructed was not a safe gearing for said machine, and was not the kind of gearing in general use on like machines; ’ ’ that the only safe and reliable gearing for such a machine, as defendant well knew, was a gearing known as the friction gearing ; that the gearing used was not, as defendant well knew, adapted for the use to which it was applied, but that defendant negligently allowed said machine to be and remain in said unsafe and dangerous condition; that if said horizontal bar had been of sufficient length said machine would not have been dangerous, and the accident in question would
The jury specifically found, among other facts, that the horizontal bar was not of proper length, that it was defective, that the lever fell and thereby put the machine in motion, that the shortness of the horizontal bar caused the lever to drop, and that the machine would not have started or appellee have been injured if the lever had not fallen. Appellant lays stress upon the allegation in the complaint, “that said notched clutch gearing, which defendant had on said machine for the purpose of throwing the same in and out of gear, when properly constructed was not a safe gearing for said machine,” etc. The jury found specially that the machine was provided with the kind of gearing, bars and levers in general use; but the jury also found that appellant knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care should have known, that the “machine was defective in that it was equipped with a notched clutch gearing,” and appellant scarcely could be said to have had such knowledge, if the machine was not defective by reason of the kind of gearing used. It is not alleged in the complaint that the injury was caused by a machine properly constructed or by the failure to use the friction gearing; but the cause of the injury is shown to have been the defective, dangerous and ill-adapted machinery actually used, which was not properly constructed.
Judgment affirmed.