The plaintiff entered the employ of the defendant on the 22d day of June, 1912, and on the 9th day of July of the same year was injured in an accident while discharging his duties. The details of the accident are not important to be set out. It was necessary to make use of a chain hoist, a mechanical contrivance operated by chains running over pulleys, in repairing a machine upon which the plaintiff had been at work. The plaintiff, with one Davis, while making use of this chain hoist, was injured seriously, and the jury has found a very substantial verdict in his favor. This chain hoist is designed to lift a load of half a ton, and it was, at the time of the accident, used in lifting a weight of 910 pounds, a point well within the safety limit of the apparatus if in good order, and the plaintiff’s theory of the case is that the ratchet wheel was defective, four of the teeth being worn down about one-eighth of an inch lower than those adjacent to them, and that these defective teeth permitted the dog or pawl to slip over and thus caused the weight which was being lifted to fall upon him, producing his injuries.
There can he no doubt that the ratchet wheel was defective; the exhibit in evidence discloses the fact, and it is plain that this defect was produced by the wear upon a portion of the wheel which was full of blowholes, and manifestly much softer than the remaining portion. The jury has found in favor of the plaintiff’s theory, that the proximate cause of this accident was the defect in this ratchet wheel governing in a measure the action of the hoisting pulleys, rather than a slipping of the hooks upon the rope which was fastened around the object being hoisted, and the only serious question presented to our mind is whether the defendant can be charged with negligence
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred, except Smith, P. J., dissenting.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.
