Blanton v. Dolb

109 Mo. 64
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 109 Mo. 64 (Blanton v. Dolb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blanton v. Dolb, 109 Mo. 64 (Mo. 1891).

Opinion

Barclay, J.

Plaintiff recovered a judgment for-personal injuries, which defendants have brought here for review.

It is unnecessary to quote the pleadings. The-[69]*69general nature of the plaintiff’s ease is that his mishap resulted from want of reasonable care as to the safety of machinery furnished by defendants, in whose service he was engaged. On the other side, defendants denied all negligence on their part, and asserted contributory negligence of the plaintiff.

The cause was tried with the aid of a jury, and a verdict for plaintiff for $5,000 resulted.

I. Plaintiff’s injuries were serious, but they need not be particularized. As defendants made no complaint of excessive damages in their motion for a new trial, that question cannot be considered open for examination now. Ridenhour v. Railroad (1890), 102 Mo. 270.

II. The first debatable point for attention arises on the objection to the plaintiff’s whole case. Defendants insist that the court should have given the instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, as requested. As the jury ultimately found for plaintiff, our duty now, in considering this, branch of the appeal, merely extends to ascertaining whether the verdict has substantial support in the testimony. It is not our province to pass on the weight of conflicting evidence in an action of this character; indeed, we have no constitutional power to do so.

At the time of the accident, defendants were operating a large packing establishment at Kansas City, Missouri. In one of its departments some of the refuse from other parts of the establishment was manufactured into fertilizing material. Among the machinery applied to this purpose was a contrivance for grinding cakes or masses of dried blood, called by the witnesses a “blood mill.” This instrument is the object of complaint and investigation here, as it was in the circuit court. We shall not attempt to picture fully the details, of this machine and of its operation. [70]*70In the view we take of the case it will not be necessary. We will merely state its general features that bear on the merits of the controversy.

The mill occupied a fixed position on the floor of a large room. Its base was a wooden frame, some three feet high, fifteen inches wide and about three feet long. Above this was an iron cylinder, arranged to revolve rapidly, filled with rows of teeth. Near that was a fixed iron plate, likewise filled with teeth, so placed as that those of the cylinder, when in motion, would run between them and thus form an effective cutting or grinding machine. The shaft of the cylinder was prolonged beyond the frame work and carried a wheel on which belting ran, communicating with motive power as explained further on.

Over the cutting machinery of the mill was a largo hopper, extending nearly to the ceiling of the room and closed on all sides save one, left open for the admission of the material to be treated. The latter, after passing through the teeth, ran out upon a board, placed at an angle on the inside of the ■ frame, from a point just below the fixed plate,' to the floor.

Immediately above the room where this mill stood was one called the “lard room.” Near the ceiling of the latter the machinery was placed which directly connected the shaft and belting that moved the “blood mill” with the general supply of steam power for the whole establishment. This connection was effected by means of a lever, a movement of which placed certain belting on a fixed or on a loose wheel, according as the operator desired. When this belting was shifted to the fixed wheel, the mill in the room below was put into-motion. When the belting was shifted from the fixed to the loose wheel, direct communication with the steam power was cut off, and the mill stopped as soon as tlm momentum of its own particular gearing was exhausted, [71]*71which, required (according to plaintiff's witnesses) about one minute when the mill was empty; less time, if there was material in it.

This lever was moved (as occasion might require in the use of the “blood mill”) by means of two ropes fastened to it and running (through holes in the inter-1 vening floor) into the mill room. By pulling one of the ropes the lever would respond so as to throw the main belting upon the fixed pulley or wheel, and start the mill; and by pulling the other rope the lever could be shifted back again, so as to carry the belting upon the live or loose wheel, and stop the mill.

The ropes hung about four feet apart in the mill room, the free end of the lower one about three feet from the floor. They passed vertically through the lard room, from its floor to the lever overhead. An iron ball of some thirty-five or forty pounds weight was provided to be tied to either rope in the mill room, and by that pressure to keep the lever in the position desired. The lever and the shafting in the lard room were not visible from the mill room because, of the intervening floor of the former.

The plaintiff had been in defendants’ employ for some time before the “blood mill” was built. He had charge of the fertilizing department, including the room where this mill was. He was not a skilled mechanic, but had often seen machinery in establishments where he had worked. He had several men under his direction in his department. At the time of the accident, one was Olsen, a Swede, who stopped the mill by order of plaintiff who had heard a noise within it as of some obstruction.

Pieces of iron and of bone occasionally got into the mill with the material to be ground. This necessitated stopping it and removing the obstruction. On this occasion plaintiff looked into the mill from the top of [72]*72the hopper after the charge or load was out, and it had stopped. He Saw that some teeth were bent, but could not discern the cause. He then looked into the mill from below and discovered a nail that had become imbedded in the framework in a way to interfere with the grinding machinery. While the latter was at rest, he put his hand between the teeth to extract the nail, when the machinery started up suddenly, caught his hand and inflicted injuries which made its amputation necessary.

The unexpected start of the mill is not ascribable to any movement of the rope in the mill room. The evidence is that, after the mill had been stopped, no one disturbed the ropes there until after plaintiff’s mishap.

Considerable expert evidence was given that, owing to the location of the fixed and loose pulleys, relative to the main belting in the lard room, that belting (connecting with the steam power) was liable to shift, temporarily, under certain conditions, from the loose to the dead pulley, sufficiently to impart motion, without any movement of the lever, designed to control such changes.

There was evidence that the mill had started on two or three former occasions without any appropriate movement of the ropes in the mill room; although plaintiff did not learn of that until after the accident.

In the lard room barrels and tierces of lard were placed, and employes of other departments frequently passed, handling these packages. The barrels, when filled, weighed three hundred and eighty or three hundred and eighty-five pounds. There was no obstacle to prevent their striking the ropes -if they were rolled that way; and in that part of the lard room it was quite dark. Expert machinists testified that the resistance afforded by the forty-pound weight on the rope in the [73]

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Bluebook (online)
109 Mo. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blanton-v-dolb-mo-1891.