19 Ind. App. 341 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1898
— The appellant brought his action against the appellee to recover damages for a personal injury suffered by the appellant while assisting as an employe of the appellee in the operation of a machine
There was a special verdict, in the form of interrogatories and the answers thereto, upon which the court rendered judgment for the áppellee. This action of the trial court is presented for review.
The facts found, so far as they need be particularly stated for the decision of the case, were, in addition to those condensed above, substantially as follows: The planer had been in use more than six months prior to appellant’s injury. When kept in proper repair, the belts, pulleys, and shifters performed their
While acting as a helper to the foreman on the planer, the appellant, on the 20th of February, 1890, received a serious injury to his right hand. The injury was caused by said hand being caught in “one of said belts” and pulleys. At the time his said hand was caught and was injured, the appellant was pressing “upon said belt” with an iron rod; that is, he was pressing upon the one of said belts in which his hand was caught. It was found that he was standing, at the time of receiving the injury, in the usual position on the top of the planer and in the discharge of his duties as such helper. He was acting at the time as helper to one Bruce, called his foreman, in the operation of the planer. He was applying the pressure to the belt when he was hurt. He had been directed so to apply the pressure to the belt by the appellant through.its foreman, Bruce.
His injury consisted in having his hand caught under the belt upon the pulley and the flesh and tendons torn from the palm and fingers by the belt passing
The belt used in raising the cross-head sometimes slipped, so that it would not raise.it. When it slipped, it was temporarily tightened by pressing against it with a stick or bar of iron held in the hands of an employe. At the time of his injury the appellant was engaged in tightening the belt by pressing upon it with a bar of iron flat upon one side and l’ound upon the other. He was holding the flat side against the belt.
The appellant was injured by having his right hand dx’awn in between the belt and the pulley upon which it ran. The pulley where his hand was caught was one of the loose pulleys, or idlers, upon which the belts used in raising and lowering the cross-head ran when not being used to x’aise or lower the cross-head. His hand was caught between the belt and pulley by reason of his pressing the belt with an iron bar and by reason of his touching the belt with an iron bar. The belt under which his hand was caught was running upon the west pulley.
Touching or pressing the belt with an iron bar while it was running on a loose pulley would not help in any way to raise or lower the cross-head of the planer. It was not the duty of the appellant at the time of his injxxry, while standing on the upper part of the stone-planer, to do anything more there than assist in caus
The appellant did not press the corner of the belt to make it climb the tight pulley. There was no necessity for him to press, against the corner of the belt to make it climb the tight pulley. The shifter, when used to shift the belt from a loose pulley to a tight one, would do that work without assistance. An instant before he was hurt he was holding an iron bar against the belt, and about ten inches above the shifter. Something on the surface of the belt struck or caught upon the rod while he was so holding it, and his hand was carried, knocked, or drawn over and beyond the shifter, inside the belt, and down into the pulley, which was belowthe shifter, and nearer to the appellant, by reason of something on the belt striking the rod from above.
We have set out the findings of the jury kt considerable length, but wre do not find it necessary to discuss or decide the matters argued by counsel in relation to the question as to the liability of a master when he has promised, but has failed, to repair a defect complained of by the servant, who has continued after such complaint to work with the defective appliance.
In the case before us it appears that there was no other defect in the machinery, except that the belt was too loose to raise and lower the cross-head without being temporarily tightened. This was the defect of which the appellant had complained to the ap
Manifestly, the verdict proceeds upon the theory that the employer’s failure in the performance of duty consisted in the continued use of belts too loose to perform their intended work without the aid of temporary pressure, and in requiring the servant to incur danger which consisted in exposing himself by press
The burden was upon the appellant to show in the verdict a right to recover upon some consistent theory. It was necessary to his recovery that every fact required to make out his case should appear in the verdict. The silence of the verdict in any material respect amounted as to such matter to a finding against him. It is not shown that he was injured through a cause for which the appellee is shown to have been blameable. The court did not err in giving, judgment for the appellee on the special'verdict. Judgment affirmed.