Carnegie Steel Co. v. Rowan

10 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 329
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedMay 15, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 329 (Carnegie Steel Co. v. Rowan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carnegie Steel Co. v. Rowan, 10 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 329 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Plaintiff! in error was engaged in the manufacture of steel and in connection with its works had several blast furnaces. In a blast furnace there are a number of water blocks inserted for the purpose of keeping the walls of the furnace as cool as possible. In this furnace there were at least two hundred of these blocks. The blocks are made of a certain character of bronze metal adapted to the purpose, and are about twenty-six inches long, oblong in shape corresponding with the outside of the wall, extending through the wall twenty-seven inches, tapering to what is called the nose, and are five or six inches deep. These blocks are at the lower part of the furnace where the heat is most intense, and run around the furnace in rows, one above the other. They are connected together so that the water circulates freely through all of them from a tank located considerably higher than the blocks and finally emptying into a well in the ground.

[330]*330Defendant in error, Rowan, was employed by the company to mix clay which was used about the different furnaces; and his box at which he worked was from seventy-five to a hundred feet from the furnace when the accident occurred. He had nothing to do with the working or operation of the furnace.

For two or three days before the accident it had been observed by the superintendent and men connected with the operation of the furnace that one of the boxes had become impaired and was leaking, but not to such extent as to require immediate removal.

A water block is ordinarily removed during a cast, when the blast is off, and the pressure is reduced .to the minimum.

The evening before the accident the .superintendent gave notice to his men in charge of the furnace to prepare the impaired block for removal, and the men did so during the night by removing the casing all around the block, which is made of cement about one-half inch thick, to a depth of ten inches into the wall. Casts are made at three, six, nine and twelve o’clock in the first half of the day and at the same time in the last half. The superintendent came at eight o’clock in the morning and it was his intention to remove the block at the nine o’clock cast but he changed the time to twelve for the reason, as claimed, that some difficulty had arisen in the water appliance and that the water was not circulating as freely through the blocks as it should do. After the nine o’clock cast was made the supply of water became more impaired and.at twelve o’clock the blocks became considerably overheated. After the cast was made at twelve o’clock, which lasted some forty-five minutes, the blast was again put on, perhaps inadvertently, as it was evidently the intention of the superintendent to remove the block at the twelve o’clock cast.

Soon after the blast was put on, a very short time, it was observed that this block had become very much overheated, indeed red hot, and before the engine could be stopped and the blast taken off the block was forced from its place and the hot metal was forced through the aperture, striking a small building, which was about twenty feet away, in which Rowan and others were finishing their dinner, whereby all of them were badly [331]*331burned, including a man by the name of Lowe; Rowan’s injuries being very serious. This building in which Rowan had just finished eating his dinner was about sixty feet from the box at which he worked and the box was not at all in line with the escaping metal, and if he had been at his box or close to it he would not have been injured. The building was a small frame structure twenty-eight by twelve feet and was used for different purposes, primarily, however, for storing clay, keeping it warm and pliable, so that it would be ready for use at any time. A stove was in the center of the building and the clay was in one end. At the other end and around the sides up to the stove benches had been placed by the men who used them while eating their dinners; also nails had been driven in the walls on which the men hung their clothes while at work; also'their dinner pails were left there.

The employes had been in the habit, of using this building in which to eat their dinners when the weather was inclement for fifteen or twenty years, and Rowan had been in the habit of eating his dinner there for a long time as the company’s agents well knew — the superintendent of the furnaces frequently eating his dinner there. There were other buildings of a similar character scattered- through the premises of the company which were used by other employes in a similar manner. There were about fifteen hundred employes of the company and nearly two-thirds, or one thousand, ate their dinners on the premises. The employes were allowed fifty minutes to get their dinners at noon hour. The day Rowan was injured was in January and the weather very inclement.

The verdict and judgment below was against plaintiff in error and it is now sought to reverse the judgment upon two grounds:

First. , The verdict is against the evidence.

Second. There was error in the charge of the court.

It is claimed the verdict is against the evidence for two reasons. First, there was no negligence upon the part of defendant causing the injury; and, second, if there was, the negligence was the act of a fellow-servant. ■

In the ease of National Steel Co. v. Lowe, 127 Federal Re[332]*332porter, 311 (United States Circuit Court of Appeals), arising out of the same accident, the question of the negligence of the company and also the question whether or not the rule of fellow-servant applied were fully considered, and it was in that case held:

“1. Plaintiff, a stove tender in defendant steel works, was burned by molten iron from a blast furnace, caused by a water block being forced from the wall of the furnace. The block had become defective on the evening of the previous day, and the superintendent ordered preparations made to remove it. That evening the packing was removed to a depth of nine or ten inches, and between 7 and 8 o ’clock the next morning the superintendent, though it had been his intention to remove the block when the blast was off the furnace during the 9 o’clock cast, on his being notified that the water was not running freely through the different blocks, by reason of the strainer being clogged, directed that the block should not be removed until 12 o’clock, and that the water strainer be repaired at the same time. Before noon, and while the blast was still on the furnace, and as certain workmen were preparing to pull out the block, the inside of which had become melted off by reason of the defect in the water apparatus, the block was suddenly forced from the wall by the pressure in the furnace, and plaintiff was burned by the flame and molten material issuing from the aperture. Held: That whether treated as a place at which to work or an appliance with which to work, it was the positive duty of the company to keep the furnace reasonably safe for its employes at work about it. For any neglect to do this, the company was responsible, as the duty could not be delegated.
“2. Whether the neglect was that of the superintendent or foreman, or a workman, in neither case was the person guilty of negligence a fellow-servant of the plaintiff, so as to relieve the company of responsibility.”

We have examined that case with care and we are content wjth the judgment and decision of the court, and that case makes it unnecessary to consider those questions further.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carnegie-steel-co-v-rowan-ohiocirct-1907.