Austin v. Fisher Tanning Co.

96 A.D. 550, 89 N.Y.S. 137
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 96 A.D. 550 (Austin v. Fisher Tanning Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. Fisher Tanning Co., 96 A.D. 550, 89 N.Y.S. 137 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Stover, J.:

Plaintiff’s intestate died as the result, of an accident which occurred at the defendant’s tannery at the village of Salamanca on November 22, 1900.

The machine upon which the accident occurred was known as a [552]*552fleshing machine. It consisted of a steel drum, supported upon standards at each end, covered with rubber and wire about one and one-fourth inches thick, about five or six feet in length, four feet" in diameter, with an opening of about one-quarter of its circumference. Through the center of the drum was a shaft to which the drum was attached by arms ; at one end was a drive wheel thirty inches in diameter, two pulley wheels and a motor; above the drum were the knives which, were so close to the drum that when a hide was placed on it they would remove the fleshings from it; this was incased in a box so that the refuse matter would not fly from the machine. The power' used was. electricity; the power was turned on or off the machine at a switch on the wall five or six feet from the back of the machine. The quantity of power was regulated by a lever six or eight inches long just below the switch. The power was put upon the drum by a clutch which was operated by a lever on the right and in front of the dram. The pulley and shafting-would revolve loose until this clutch was thrown in when the drum would revolve toward the operator.

On the morning of the accident the foreman in charge of the beam house found the machine out of order. Foote, the workman who had charge of the operation of the machine in the ordinary operation of fleshing, went to the plaintiff’s intestate and reported that the machine was out of order and deceased came to repair it. The deceased was, and for a year previous had been, the master machinist or general repair man in charge of all the machines, some seventy-five in number, in the defendant’s tannery. The deceased had been in the habit of fixing this machine when out of repair and had frequently fixed it. The deceased upon arrival at the machine went to the rear. At this time the power was on, but the drum Was not revolving, the clutch not having been thrown in.

Up to this point there is practically no dispute as to the occurrence, and it is not disputed that about this time the deceased undertook either the examination or repair of the machine, and'a little later placed his head within the opening in the drum. Foote, the operator in charge, thought Austin told him to start the drum, as it was a little high, the inference being that it was necessary to change the location of the opening so that the repairs could be more conveniently made. Foote went to the front of the machine and oper[553]*553ated the lever which threw the clutch in, and the deceased was heard to utter a cry, and was soon after found at the rear of the machine, injured fatally, having been struck by the revolving drum, he having his head and shoulders in the opening at the time the power was turned on.

Foote had been in the employ of the defendant about a year and a half, operating this machine. Plaintiff’s intestate had been in the employ of the defendant during this time,-and was accustomed, to repair this and other machines as they became out of order.. Foote, the operator, was a Pole, and it is claimed on behalf of the-plaintiff that his knowledge of the English language was so imperfect that he was unable to understand directions that were given to-him; that by reason of his imperfect understanding of the language-, he misunderstood the direction given by Austin and started the. machine, causing Austin’s death.

A witness for the plaintiff testified, under objection, that-some-twenty to twenty-five minutes after the accident, and upon regaining consciousness, the deceased said: “ Billy, Billy, I told you to-not start the machine.”

The negligence of the defendant is predicated upon two propositions : First, in failing to use reasonable care to make and enforce-proper and suitable rules for the safety of its employees; and, second, in employing Foote to operate the machine, he being incompetent by reason of his failure to understand the English language.

As to the first proposition, the court was asked to charge: “ That if Austin, knowing that defendant had not made and promulgated, a rule that no machine should be started while it was being repaired,, yet nevertheless continued his employment, that such continuance: in his employment amounted to a consent upon his part to incur the risk to which he was thereby exposed, if any, and dispensed with the duty, if any, of the defendant to make and promulgate such a. rule.”

This was charged, and no exception appears thereto in the record, so that this becomes the law of the case; and under the facts as-they appear the jury must have found upon this proposition against the contention of the plaintiff; or, if otherwise, the finding was unsupported by the evidence. But beyond this we think the danger to one repairing a machine of this kind while in operation is so opea [554]*554and apparent that a rule for the government of employees in that particular is not called for. As was said in Ehrenfried v. Lackwanna Iron § Steel Company (89 App. Div. 130), it would be simply a rule that an employee should not do an act which would necessarily and obviously do. an injury to another employee; and the master is not bound to promulgate rules under such circumstances.

The other proposition, which the plaintiff has urged with a great deal of force, is that defendant was guilty of negligence in employing Foote, who, by reason of his ignorance of the English language* was unable to understand directions for the operation of the machine: And beyond this comes the consideration of the contributory negligence of the deceased.

The deceased was a machinist, and by all fair. inferences must have known the dangerous character of the work, namely, that with the power turned on the machine the simple operation of the lever would set the drum in revolution, and necessarily injury would result to one whose body was within the opening of the drum. It would have been a very easy matter to have turned the power off entirely, so that the repairs could have been made with greater safety to the mechanic.

We think that the fact that the operator of the machine did not have full control of the English language was not sufficient to render the defendant liable for the death of plaintiff’s intestate. The operator had been in charge of this machine, and so far as the- evidence shows was able to operate it and had operated it for a longtime before the accident.

It was stipulated upon the trial that it was the duty of Austin to repair this machine whenever it was reported to him, or whenever it came to' his attention in any manner. This placed the machine for the time being in the care of Austin, the mechanic, and it was not .part of Foote’s duty, so far as the record appears, to run the machine or control it during the time that Austin was engaged in its repair. Austin had been a fellow-employee of Foote for more than a year; was familiar with the entire situation, including Foote’s lack of knowledge of the English language. With full control of the machine he left the power on, and gave instructions to Foote either to start the machine or not to ¿tart the machine. He thereby took the risk of his own action, and defendant cannot [555]*555be rendered liable therefor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 A.D. 550, 89 N.Y.S. 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-fisher-tanning-co-nyappdiv-1904.