100 P. 507 | Kan. | 1909

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

James Lareau was employed by the defendant to work in its brick plant. His clothing caught on a set-screw projecting from a revolving shaft in the plant and he was killed. The administrator of his *578estate sued the defendant and recovered damages for the benefit of the deceased-’s next of kin, his father and mother. The defendant prosecutes error.

At the time of the casualty Lareau’s specific duties were those of an off-bearer from a repressing-machine. He removed pressed brick from a belt which carried them from the repressing-machine and placed them on a small car, or truck. Four men were employed as off-bearers, and it was the rule that one rested while the others worked. While sitting on an empty car at the repressing-machine, taking his turn at resting, Lareau was informed by an employee named Evans that Henry Cole, the machinery, foreman of the plant, had said that a brick-making machine located twenty-five or thirty feet from the repressing-machine was cutting bolts,, and that one of the boxes of it or near it was hot. Lareau started toward the scene of the trouble and was caught by the set-screw, a few feet away from the brick-machine.

The petition counted upon the provisions of the factory act (Laws 1903, ch. 356), sections 4 and 6 of which read as follow:

“Every person owning or operating any manufacturing establishment in which machinery is used shall furnish and supply for use therein belt-shifters, or other safe mechanical contrivance, for the purpose of throwing on or off belts or pulleys; and wherever it is practicable machinery shall be operated with loose pulleys. • All vats, pans, saws, planers, cog gearing, belting, shafting, set-screws and machinery of every description used in a manufacturing- establishment shall, where practicable, be properly and safely guarded, for the purpose of preventing or avoiding the death of or injury to the persons employed or laboring in any such establishment; and it is hereby made the duty of all persons owning or operating manufacturing establishments to provide and keep the same furnished with safeguards as herein specified.”
“In all actions brought under and by virtue of the provisions of this act it shall be sufficient for the plaintiff to prove in the first instance, in order to establish *579the liability of the defendant, that the death or injury complained of resulted in consequence of the failure of the person owning or operating the manufacturing establishment where such death or injury occurred to provide said establishment with safeguards as required by this act, or that the failure to provide such safeguard directly contributed to such death or injury.”

The evidence showed that it was practicable to guard the set-screw, so that negligence per se on the part of the defendant was established. But the defendant asserts that Lareau was not at a place in the brick plant where he had a right to be when he was injured, and hence that he had no right to the protection afforded by the factory act and a demurrer to the evidence ought to have been sustained.

The petition alleged, and there was evidence to show, that off-bearers were instructed to keep a lookout for things going wrong about the machinery and to report such matters to the foreman. They had general instructions to look after the interests of the company, and do whatever was needed to that end. If they saw anything that was undone, or boxing needing oil, or the like, they were supposed to attend to it. When breakdowns occurred they helped to make repairs, and Lareau himself had assisted in making repairs on such occasions. The petition alleged that Lareau saw a smoking box and went to it to ascertain its condition. The jury found specially that he was not examining the box when he was injured, and such is without doubt'the only conclusion to be derived from the evidence. The plaintiff’s evidence established that Cole was working at the brick-machine when Lareau approached, and the defendant argues from this fact there was no occasion for Lareau to inspect, report or repair. The plaintiff tries to show by the evidence that Lareau probably could not see Cole because of Cole’s position at the brick-machine. The evidence is clear that nobody directed Lareau to go over toward the brick-machine, and the defendant asserts what probably is true *580—that the evidence does not show just what he was doing when he was hurt. The jury found that Lareau was in the line of his duty. Was there any evidence to go to the jury on this proposition?

It is plain that Lareau had no knowledge of trouble with the machinery about the brick-machine until Evans informed him. He acted because of the information Evans gave him and not from idle curiosity, because he sat on the empty car until Evans delivered his message. He rested under an obligation to take cognizance of matters like those to which Evans referred. He was not at the time manually taking brick from the repressing-machine, and an opportunity presented itself to be.of some service to his employér. All this being true, there was evidence enough .that he started to the supposed place of trouble in obedience to duty. Whether he saw Cole as he approached the brick-machine, or when he first saw Cole, if he did see him, is not important. He was executing a justifiable movement when he was hurt, and was inside the pale of the protection of the factory act.

However sound the position just stated may be the court is not disposed to rest upon it, because the evidence was sufficient to authorize a finding by the jury that Lareau was within the scope of his duty as an off-bearer when he was injured. He was engaged in the prosecution of the work of an off-bearer while he was taking his respite as well as while he was taking brick from the belt of the repressing-machine. (Sugar Co. v. Riley, 50 Kan. 401, 31 Pac. 1090.) It does not appear that the defendant had designated any particular place -as a resting-place or had prescribed any boundaries within which resting off-bearers should be confined. No rule of the company is shown and no rule of law is cited which required Lareau to spend his season of rest sitting on the empty car near the repressing-machine. He might have been required at any moment to get out of the way of busy workmen. It was his *581duty to keep himself in readiness to begin work at the repressing-machine the moment the time arrived for one of his fellows to rest, but until then he was allowed some freedom of action. He could not- safely desert the proper sphere of his own work and needlessly wander about in other departments of the factory, or institute prying expeditions into affairs which lay beyond or did not concern his work. But since he was not restricted to any specific spot he could use his own discretion in selecting a place to spend his period of rest, and with due circumspection might rightfully occupy any of the vacant spaces of the factory near his own machine and within touch of his work from which he was not expressly forbidden. (Hefferin v. The Illinois, 63 Fed. 161.) Whether any direction except the one taken was open to Lareau when he left the empty car does not appear. Whether under the circumstances he went too far away was at least a question for the jury. The defendant’s duty to guard its machinery extended to all places which off-bearers might reasonably be expected to use in the performance of their duties, including the taking of turns at-resting.

It is claimed Lareau was guilty of contributory negligence. The jury returned a special finding as follows :

“Ques. If you should find the machinery was defective, you may state if such defect was open and obvious to ordinary inspection or was hidden and concealed. Ans. Open.”

The uncontradicted evidence was that the machinery was in motion and that the set-screw revolved so rapidly that it was not visible. The jury found specially that Lareau had never been warned of the set-screw, did not know of its existence, did not know of the danger portended by its presence, and lacked the opportunities for knowledge of it possessed by the defendant. He had a right to assume that set-screws in revolving shafting were properly guarded, and rested *582under no duty to make an inspection. Therefore the jury had good reason to conclude that he was not negligent.

Much space is given in the defendant’s brief to the question whether the beneficiaries of the action had the right to expect to receive pecuniary benefit from the continued life of the deceased, and consequently whether they suffered damages from his death. The evidence and findings show that Lareau was twenty-one years old, unmarried, of normal physique, and in good health. He was industrious, steady, and without bad habits. His relations with his parents were most pleasant. He never made trouble at home or at school, was always kind to his mother, and, as his father said, they “got along fine.” He had been away from home since he was nineteen, and during that time his parents made no claim to his earnings. He did as he pleased with them. He visited his parents, and a few months before his death his father visited him. Although the parents were neither old, indigent nor infirm, and were not dependent upon him for support, he was in the habit of contributing to their support, the last occasion being a short time before he was killed. Altogether he sent home some $35, At .the time of his death he owned a saddle-pony and was earning $1.75 per day. His motive for leaving home was simply to see something of the world, and arrangements had been perfected for him to return home and help his father run two farms, which arrangement would have been mutually advantageous to him and to his parents. The jury gave a verdict for $500.

We have here a relationship which naturally leads to the conferring of pecuniary benefits—a willing disposition to contribute, a capability to contribute likely to increase, contributions actually made, and a definite plan from which further contributions were likely to result. It is not only reasonable to suppose but it is quite certain that these parents would have been pe*583cuniarily advantaged by the continued life of their son, and under all the decisions of this court sufficient data appeared from which the jury, taking into consideration the knowledge and experience common to all men, could compute the damage they suffered from his death. {Railway Co. v. Fajardo, 74 Kan. 314, 86 Pac. 301; Railway Co. v. McLaughlin, 73 Kan. 248, 84 Pac. 989; Railway Co. v. Ryan, 62 Kan. 682, 64 Pac. 603; Railway Co. v. Moffatt, 60 Kan. 113, 55 Pac. 837; Railroad Co. v. Cross, 58 Kan. 424, 49 Pac. 599; Coal Co. v. Limb, 47 Kan. 469; 28 Pac. 181; U. P. Rly. Co. v. Dunden, 37 Kan. 1, 14 Pac. 501; and cases cited in these opinions.)

Instruction No. 8 is an entirety, and not a series of disconnected and unrelated charges. When so read, as the law requires, it is neither ambiguous nor inaccurate, and very clearly did not mislead the jury. Special question No. 56 was a catch-question, and was answered with perfect truthfulness and accuracy. It was not indispensable that mortuary tables should be read in evidence. A verbal criticism of an instruction relating to the defendant’s duty to provide a reasonably safe place to work is academic. The factory act fixes the duty at a much higher standard than the language criticised. The jury found that the set-screw was located within the field of defendant’s duty, and did not, therefore, disregard instruction No. 4. The demeanor of the witnesses whose testimony the jury ignored may have shown them to be unworthy of belief. Other questions presented do not require special notice.

The judgment of the district court is affirmed.

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