26 Ind. App. 272 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1901
Upon the first appeal in this case the judgment of the trial court was reversed because of error in sustaining a motion in arrest of judgment. Daugherty v. Midland Steel Co., 23 Ind. App. 78. The motion in arrest was then overruled, and judgment rendered on the general verdict in appellee’s favor. Erom that judg
The jury answered that appellee is thirty-one years old; on October 10, 1895, he had been working for about three months in appellant’s open hearth department; in connection with the furnaces were used two pits in which were placed moulds weighing about 2,000 pounds, and in which were cast ingots or billets of steel about four feet long and of different thicknesses, and weighing 1,000 to 2,400 pounds; for the purpose of lifting the moulds and ingots from the pit,.the company used a hydraulic crane, consisting of an upright cylinder in which was a piston to which was attached a horizontal beam about twenty feet long, so constructed as to be given a rotary motion covering the whole area of the pit; this beam carried a trolley running upon wheels, and on the underside of the trolley were four heavy metal chains, on the lower end of which were hooks for attaching objects to be moved; by forcing water into the cylinder, the piston and beam were raised, and objects attached to the chains could be swung around to any desired place within sweep of the beam; the water was turned in and shut off by means of levers. Just before appellee was injured, ingots, to which he assisted in attaching the chains, were raised from the pit and swung around to be let down, when a hook of one of the chains caught to one of the ingots. The man in charge of the beam then caused it to move to loose the chain. At this time the trolley was standing out further toward the end of the beam than opposite the place where the chain was fast, and when the beam was moved up this caused the trolley to start suddenly toward the upright part of the crane, the chain came loose, and the four chains swung violently toward appellee, one of them striking him. Appellee was standing between where the trolley then was and the upright part of the crane,
It is unnecessary to refer to the numerous cases declaring the rules to be applied in determining whether a motion for judgment upon the answers to interrogatories should be sustained. The general verdict finds the material facts averred to be true, and all reasonable presumptions and intendments must be indulged in its favor. The specific facts found in answers tó interrogatories must stand without any presumptions in their favor. To control, they must not only
The complaint is set out at some length in the opinion on the former appeal, and the defects in the crane and the difficulties in its operation are therein stated. The jury’s answers set forth the effect of the leaky valves upon the management and control of the crane, and upon this question are not in conflict with the general verdict. It appears that when the power was applied, elevating the beam and stretching the chain beneath, the trolley to which one end of the chain was attached was nearer the outer end of the beam than the weight to which the other end was attached. This diagonal pull started the trolley running, and when the chain came loose carried the chains with it. It is evident that if a great force was suddenly applied to raise the beam, the more rapid would be the movement of the trolley, and it would go further toward the inner end of the beam after the chain came loose. The jury find that because of the leaky valves the force had to be applied more suddenly, that the crane was harder to start, and when started could not be readily stopped. It is found that the crane was operated by the force of the water in the hydraulic pump, and that the check valves in the pump were worn, untrue, and out of repair, causing the pump to leak badly; it is found also there were no check valves in the upright cylinder. The fact that this leakage lessened the force by which the crane was operated would not necessarily make the sudden starting of the cylinder by applying the available force suddenly an impossibility.
The complaint avers that on or about the last day of September, 1895, and within about ten days before the injury, appellee made complaint of the defective crane; that appellant induced appellee to continue, by promising that within
In the complaint the promise relating to the defective crane is averred to have been a promise to repair within a reasonable time, and it is averred that complaint was made of the defect on or about the last of September, and “within about ten days prior to the date” of the injury. The complaint avers the injury occurred within six days after the promise was made. The answers do not show the exact date of the promise, but do show the injury occurred October 10th. Under the averments of the complaint, the promise to repair may have been made after the last of September, and there need not necessarily have been only one complaint about the defect. Eor the purpose of aiding the answers we can not presume that the complaint of the defects made by appellee and referred to in the answers was made on the last of September. It does not necessarily follow from the answers, when construed in connection with material facts which could have been found by the general verdict, that the
As we construe the answers, we can not conclude that there is an irreconcilable conflict between the answers and the general verdict on this question. The rights and liabilities of the parties growing out of a promise to repair have recently been carefully considered by this Court and the Supreme Court in the case of McFarlan Carriage Co. v. Potter, 21 Ind. App. 692, and McFarlan Carriage Co. v. Potter, 153 Ind. 107. The principles announced in those cases are controlling in the case at bar.
judgment affirmed.