Bibby v. Wausau Lumber Co.

50 N.W. 337, 80 Wis. 367, 1891 Wisc. LEXIS 220
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 50 N.W. 337 (Bibby v. Wausau Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bibby v. Wausau Lumber Co., 50 N.W. 337, 80 Wis. 367, 1891 Wisc. LEXIS 220 (Wis. 1891).

Opinion

Cassoday, J.

At the time of the accident the mill was sawing at the rate of from 50,000 to 60,000 feet of lumber, board measure, in twelve hours. This was done by a circular saw sixty inches in diameter, making from 850 to 900 revolutions per minute. The saw was attached to the end of a horizontal iron or steel shaft or arbor, some eight or ten feet in length, by a nut pressing it between two collars, six inches in diameter, with two lug-pins passing through the saw to hold it firm. This shaft or arbor rested in iron or steel boxes, upon two bearings on the respective sides of a wooden frame,— one very near the collar against the saw, several inches wide, covered with an iron or steel cap, firmly fastened down with bolts; and the other at the end in a similar box, but without any cap, the absence 'of which cap is referred to in the fourth, fifth, and sixteenth findings of the jury, mentioned in the foregoing statement. Upon about the middle of this shaft or arbor there was a cast-iron [370]*370pulley, weighing somewhere from 300 to 700 pounds, and about twenty-eight inches in diameter and nineteen inches, wide on the surface, over which there was a belt of similar width attached to the machinery below, and by which the saw was run. That pulley is referred to in the second finding of the jury mentioned in said statement. Below and against such belt there was a heavy device for holding the belt firm on the pulle}7 mentioned. On a plane with the center, of the saw, or a little below, there was a steel guide to the saw, firmly bolted upon the corner of the frame mentioned, and passing around just in front of the saw, and coming up on each side of it just back of the saw-teeth and almost to the plate of the saw. The logs were received over a roll-way which extended to nearly in line with the saw, and some eight or ten feet in front of it, and from there were rolled onto the blocks or head-blocks of the carriage made for that purpose. These head-blocks, mentioned in the sixth and seventh findings of the jury, were some-eight or ten feet apart, about six inches wide, and the top of each was of cast-iron, with a steel facing, and, when passed by the saw, the end came within about half an inch of it. The log on the carriage at the time of the accident was very crooked, twelve feet long, fourteen inches in diameter, and fastened with dogs to the head-blocks. A few feet from the end of the log towards the saw was a chair,, facing the log, and occupied by a man known as the “ setter,” mentioned in the tenth and eleventh findings of the jury, and who, by means of a lever in front of him, set the log so as to cut off a slab or board of the desired thickness. Behind the saw, and outside of the carriage track, was a frame some five or six feet wide, in which were rollers to carry off the slabs and boards taken from the log. On the top of the side of that frame towards the carriage track was an iron strap, referred to in the third and eighth findings of the jury, the end of which was about four feet [371]*371back of the saw, and the face of which, together with the top of such rollers, was about on the same plane with the top of the head-blocks.

The power which moved the carriage with the log upon it back and forth upon the track was by steam-feed, and was entirely separate and independent from the power which propelled the saw, and was operated -and controlled wholly by the plaintiff, as head sawyer, by means of an upright lever about four feet from the line of the head-blocks, and a little more than that distance from the saw, and partially in front of it, and about half that distance from the wooden covering to the pulley and arbor. In operating the carriage the plaintiff held the upper end of the lever with his left hand, standing between the lever and the log or carriage, and facing the saw, the log, and the “ setter; ” and then, when the log was properly set, he would move the lever the way which would force the log against the saw until it passed through it; and then he would move the lever in the opposite direction, and that would reverse the steam, and send the log and carriage back in front of the saw, to be reset for a repetition of the operation. The upper end of the lever only moved through an arc of about one foot, and when the lever was straight up the steam would be shut off, and the carriage and log would stop whenever the momentum ceased, — which would be in a distance of four feet or less, depending upon the speed at the time.

The log in question was very crooked. The plaintiff first took a slab from the side of the log on which the middle was bent outward, and then turned it down on the sawed side and took off another slab, and then turned it down on that side and started the saw in, so that the slab was at first quite thick, and then became very thin near the middle of the log, and finally broke off, and, in the language of the sixth, seventh, and eighth findings of the jury, the piece of [372]*372slab so broken off was drawn forward by the motion of the saw into the saw-cut, and, by reason of the piece of slab so wedging into the cut of the saw, the saw was turned out of its course, so as to strike the iron head-blocks, and thereby, in whole or in part, caused the accident.

It appears from the evidence that the place where the saw so struck the .head-block was some four inches out of the true line of the saw. The manifest result was, what the undisputed evidence clearly shows, that by reason of the saw beiDg thus drawn out of its course the prong of the guide to the saw, on the side towards the log mentioned, first broke; that, that allowed the saw to be drawn still further out of its course, until it struck the head-block, as mentioned; that such striking of the head-block broke off about one-third of the saw and several teeth from the remaining portion; that such striking of the head-block presented an irresistible obstacle from below, which necessarily lifted the saw, and tore off the cap bolted down over the arbor near the saw mentioned, and also broke'or burst the pulley mentioned, and destroyed the wooden covering to the same; and that some portion of some of the fragments struck the plaintiff in the face, and resulted in the destruction of his eye. The strain upon the several parts mentioned, by reason of the saw thus striking the solid head-block, must, from the very nature of things, have been very severe. The belt around the pulley must have been very strong, or it would have broken before the pulley, and thus relieved the latter and the arbor from the power below. Such strain on the belt necessarily tended to hold the arbor in place, especially the end furthest from the saw,known as the “tail end.” The jury found that the pulley was sufficient to stand the strain put upon it in the ordinary operation of the mill, and hence that no negligence was attributable to its insufficiency.

The learned and able counsel for the plaintiff insists that [373]*373the jury properly found that the defendant’s negligence consisted in whole or in part in knowingly leaving the cap off the tail end of the arbor. It is quite obvious, in the very nature of things, that, so long as the strap around the pulley remained unbroken, that end of the arbor would necessarily remain in place. Had the cap on the saw end of the arbor remained firm, and the strap broken before the pulley, there might have been some force in arguing that, had that cap been on and securely bolted down, it would have partially relieved the strain on the strap and pulley, and served to hold that end of the arbor in place.

It is true, the defendant knew that cap was off, and só did the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.W. 337, 80 Wis. 367, 1891 Wisc. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bibby-v-wausau-lumber-co-wis-1891.