Casterton v. American Blower Co.

106 N.W. 61, 142 Mich. 407, 1905 Mich. LEXIS 704
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1905
DocketDocket No. 137
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 106 N.W. 61 (Casterton v. American Blower Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casterton v. American Blower Co., 106 N.W. 61, 142 Mich. 407, 1905 Mich. LEXIS 704 (Mich. 1905).

Opinion

Hooker, J.

The defendant owned a manufacturing plant, and the plaintiff was in its employ. It had an elevator, which was used for the handling of freight. It was about 70 feet from the place where plaintiff worked. The elevator consisted of'an open platform, about 6 feet square, having two side pieces connected by a cross-beam across the top, to which beam the lifting cable was attached. This cable extended to the roof of the building, where it ran over two pulleys, and then descended to a winding drum “in the machinery ” which governed the [408]*408raising and lowering of the elevator. The machinery consisted of two loose pulleys, and a tight pulley and the drum, all of which were fastened to the ceiling of the first floor of the heater room (in which room plaintiff worked), a little east of the elevator and directly over a water-closet provided for use by the men. The ceiling of this room was about 14 feet high. There was no regular operator for the elevator, and it was used by the men indiscriminately as occasion required. One Grates, who operated it on the occasion of the accident, testified:

“ It was operated by two belts. By pulling a rope, one belt was shifted from one of the idlers to the tight pulley, and the elevator ascended. By pulling the other rope, another belt was shifted from the other idler to the tight pulley, and the elevator descended. It was supposed to stop of itself when it arrived at the first floor.”

On the occasion of the accident a workman took a truck containing 2,240 pounds of iron posts upon the elevator from the first to the second floor. Grates testified that when the elevator reached the second floor it stopped, but he heard the machinery still running, and knew that the elevator would fall, because, if it worked properly, the machinery would not have kept running. The belt would have gone upon the idler. He jumped off, and called to his companion to do so; but he did not have time. The elevator went down slowly about two feet, and then fell, or plunged, to the floor. He stated, further, that the effect of the elevator dropping was to speed up the pulley wheels that were over the closet, so that they burst. One of the pieces fell upon the plaintiff, who was at the time in the closet, and injured, him. Another piece went up through the ceiling and floor above.

What caused the elevator to act as above described was not shown. No one seemed to know that it was out of repair in any particular. Grates also testified that the reason that the elevator fell was because the machinery was not in the right condition, but the testimony shows that his only reason for the conclusion was the fact that [409]*409the machinery fell. He also said that he saw no safety clutches upon the side of the elevator. One Watson was called for plaintiff. He had worked there on an elevator (presumably this one) in 1902. Being asked if that elevator ever fell with him, the court sustained an objection, saying, however, that counsel might show that the elevator was faulty'. One Singer testified that he worked there in the fall of 1908. He was asked:

“ Did you ever know that elevator to fall while you were there ? * * *
“Did you ever repair the elevator machinery, or help repair it, in 1903 ? * * *
“How many times had you, previous to October 12, 1903, repaired that elevator ? * * *
“ What defects, when you repaired that elevator along that time, did you find ? ”

All of these questions were objected to, and the objections were sustained, except the last; the court saying:

“You may tell what defects you found in the elevator when you repaired it.”

His answer was:

‘ ‘ The cable was loose. * * * It happened once in a while.”

He testified that he did not know of his own knowledge what caused it to fall on this occasion. This witness said that he did not repair it after the accident, though he saw it, and the center pulley — i. e., the tight pulley — was broken. Fred Houston, a millwright, was sworn for the plaintiff. He testified that he had the care of this machinery. Counsel asked:

“Was that a cranky elevator ? * * *
“ Didn’t it work spasmodically at times P * * *
“Had it not, within a year previous to this accident, become ungovernable and fallen in a similar manner ? . * * *
“How many times, to your knowledge, if you have any, has this elevator become ungovernable ? ”

Answers to these questions were not permitted. The [410]*410witness stated that the three pulleys were broken on the occasion of the accident. This witness disputed Grates, by saying that the machinery was not expected to stop; that it is supposed to go at all times; that it would simply run the idlers and not the elevator. The court asked:

From the facts you saw there, could you tell how that thing broke, from the examination you made of it ?
A. No, sir. * * *
Q. What is your opinion ?
“A. When the elevator started up, the operator, or whoever it was, when he started the elevator up, I don’t believe he properly shifted the belt onto the tight pulley; but it was far enough to start the machinery going — to lift the elevator. When the elevator arrived at the top landing, it only had probably two inches of belt, where it should have had four, to' throw off. Well, they had a good-sized load, not over the capacity of the elevator. I. don’t believe, and being the case that there is only a small amount of helt there to throw off this tight pulley, and then the brake is supposed to set at the same time between the two. The brake didn’t have time tó set, and the weight that was on the car caused it to lower. It didn’t drop.
“ Q. Where does the brake set ?
“A. Onto the tight pulley.
Q. Does it set on the pulley ? Is the brake right on the pulley ?
11 A. Yes, it faces the pulley; yes, sir. The brake shoe on the car.
Q. And the falling of the elevator made the wheel go so fast that the brake set and broke it ?
“A. That is my supposition — that when the car arrived at the bottom floor that the pulleys were going about 600 revolutions a minute, and this brake was set on it.
“ Q. Were there any safety catches on the side of that elevator ?
“A. Yes, sir.”

In answer to further questions by plaintiff’s counsel, he said that he had lifted twice that weight on the same-sized machine. He also said that a new lifting cable had been put on two days before the accident. . The court said to the jury that the only evidence presented was the fact that [411]*411the pulleys broke; the cause or reason being entirely unknown. He held that negligence had not been shown, and plaintiff could not recover.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 N.W. 61, 142 Mich. 407, 1905 Mich. LEXIS 704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casterton-v-american-blower-co-mich-1905.