120 Mich. 581 | Mich. | 1899
The plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment for an alleged negligent injury to her husband, William Middaugh, resulting in his death. The facts appearing on the trial were that on March 2, 1897, defendants were, and for more than 15 years prior thereto had been, copartners operating an extensive lumber manufacturing plant at Jennings, Missaukee county, Mich. On said day they had in their employ George Moore as super
This disk and shaft had been brought from the depot by the superintendent and these three men, and placed on the lower floor, under its proper place. At this point Moore was called away temporarily, and left the raising of the disk to be proceeded with in his absence. The shaft and disk were then raised, by means of rope and pulley-blocks, to a scaffold about ?■£ feet above the floor, and rested there. This scaffold was constructed by utilizing a “running-board ” for its east support, and a 2x8 spiked to two posts about 12 feet west of the running-board for its west support, and then placing three or four loose planks east and west across these two supports, and directly under the position of the shaft and disk when in place. The “running-board ” is a stationary plank running north and south, from post to post, lengthwise of the mill, about 7£ feet above the lower floor, and is used to walk on in oiling bearings, shifting belts, and other things which would otherwise require carrying a ladder from place to place. The disk and shaft had been pulled up by means of the rope and blocks between these loose planks, and, when of sufficient height, the loose planks were pushed nearer together, and under
On the south side of this post is a box, which bears the end of a 3-inch shaft that has a revolution of about 300 to the minute. The west end of the shaft runs in this box, and, as is usual at the end bearing, a 2-inch collar is secured to the shaft against the east side of the box. The collar is held on the shaft by means of a set-screw, which projects from the collar about seven-eighths of an inch. It revolves in a square corner formed by the south face of the post and the east side of the box. It is seven-eighths of an inch east from the box, and 2^ inches west of the east face of the post, and the front or south line of the box projects out about an inch beyond the periphery of the revolving set-screw. It is 4 feet from the bottom of the shaft down to the floor. This 3-inch shaft formed the north boundary, and the running-board mentioned formed the west boundary, of a clear open space 5 or 6 feet east and west by 10 or 12 feet north and south.
To still further raise the disk, and place the same in position, Yandon and Middaugh took the rope where it had been dropped over the running-board by Woodcook,. and proceeded to pull. Middaugh stood with his back to the revolving shaft, and Yandon facing him, both standing near the 12-inch post. Woodcook was on the scaffold to guide the upper end of the disk shaft through a hole in the floor above. Neither Woodcook nor Yandon saw Middaugh at the moment of the accident, as Yandon
The lower portion of the mill was lighted by windows and an open door. The disk in question was about 20 feet from one window, about 25 feet from another, and about 15 feet from a large door, where teams drive through. Yandon, who was called as a witness for plaintiff, testified that, when a man first comes into the mill from the outside, he cannot see very good, but he further testified that there was no difficulty in seeing the shaft; it could be plainly seen. “I had no difficulty in seeing objects about the mill down there after I was down there a few minutes. Mr. Middaugh had been under- there longer than I had.”
The plaintiff offered testimony showing that defendants had rebuilt the mill some two years before the accident, and that in most mills of modern construction the setscrews are either covered or counter-sunk. The plaintiff called Mr. Woodcook as a witness. He testified that, on an occasion a month or two before the accident, deceased had filled the place of day-watchman; that it was his duty as day-watchman to oil the box that the shaft in question ran in; and that witness was unable to see how the deceased could have failed to see the collar and set-screw while doing so. This witness further testified that, a day or two prior to the accident, witness and deceased were working together in the basement of the mill, putting up some bents; that, while at work, a Mr. Trickey, an employe, passed under the shaft on which Middaugh was afterwards caught; that deceased and witness had a conversation about it, as to which the witness testified as follows:
“We talked something about the place being dangerous for a man to dodge under there, for he might get caught.*585 The set-screw was mentioned. We said it was a dangerous place there; there was a set-screw there, and a man dodging under there might get caught.”
It further appeared that deceased was an experienced mill man, having worked in a mill for upwards of 15 years. At the conclusion of the testimony, the defendants’ counsel asked the court to charge that there could be no recovery.
The plaintiff’s counsel state their petition in their brief as follows:
“That, under the proof, it was a question of fact for the jury to pass on as to (1) whether the danger was so apparent that Middaugh must be held to have assumed the risk; (2) whether deceased had prior knowledge of the fact that there was a projecting set-screw on the shaft; (3) whether the deceased was not justified in acting on the suggestion of Woodcook in taking his position and doing his work-where he did. And we submit, under the law, that the deceased had a right to assume that the place designated was a safe place, and, if it proved otherwise, the fault would be the fault of the defendants, who were represented by Woodcook.”
We are unable to assent to these propositions, in view of the testimony in this case. We do not find it necessary to pass upon the first, inasmuch as we think the second cannot be maintained. The undisputed testimony shows that deceased had for a long time been employed about this mill; that at least on one occasion his duties brought him in a position where he should have discovered the setscrew on the shaft; and that he was, not more than two or three days before, informed of the danger, and his attention specifically called to the set-screw. Under these circumstances, the deceased must be held to have assumed the risk, and, if it was negligence to attempt the work in which deceased was engaged, he was himself guilty of contributory negligence. Michigan Central R. Co. v. Smithson, 45 Mich. 212; Brennan v. Railroad Co., 93 Mich. 156; Perlick v. Wooden - Ware Co., 119 Mich.
In support of the proposition that deceased'was justified in acting on the suggestion of Woodcook, and in taking his position where he did, plaintiff’s counsel cite Walker v. Railway Co., 104 Mich. 606; Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Bayfield, 37 Mich. 205; Jones v. Railway Co., 49 Mich. 573. In each of these cases the servant was directed out of the line of his employment by a superior. In the present case the deceased was directly in the line of his employment, so that, if it be considered that Wood-cook, in casting the rope down where he did, invited deceased to take a position dangerously near the shaft, the case presented is not at all analogous to the cases cited; on the contrary, if there was fault in that regard, it was the fault of a fellow-servant. The instruction asked by defendants should have been given.
Judgment reversed, and new trial ordered.