Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Lillard

141 P. 8, 42 Okla. 109, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 308
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 12, 1914
Docket3259
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 141 P. 8 (Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Lillard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Lillard, 141 P. 8, 42 Okla. 109, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 308 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

HARRISON, C.

This was an action brought by plaintiff for injuries resulting in the loss of his eye in endeavoring to drive a steel drill bit into a socket preparatory to drilling a hole through a sheet of steel. Plaintiff was an employee operating a drilling machine in defendant’s shops in Shawnee. The bit in question, as it appears from the record, was an *110 ordinary, hardened steel, biunt-ended straight bit, thirteen-sixteenths of an inch in size and about eight inches in length, flattened on each side of the top end so as to prevent its turning in the socket into which it was being placed for operation. It appears that, in adjusting these bits in the socket in which they were intended to work, it was necessary to tap them with a hammer or mallet in order to drive them far enough into the sockets that the flattened end or head of the bit would enter a slot and prevent its turning in the socket when the machinery for drilling started.

It is contended by Lillard that the flattened end of the bit in question had at some time become twisted off, thereby leaving no flattened surface to fit into the slot of the socket, and thereby necessitating that it be driven tighter into the socket so as to hold it and prevent it turning when the machinery started. And it is alleged, and this point is not denied, that, in tapping the bit so as to drive it tighter into the socket, a sliver pr piece of steel struck Lillard in the eye, putting his eye out. It is contended by counsel for Lillard that the piece of steel which put his eye out flew from the twisted end of the drill and escaped through a slot in the socket which is about an inch in length by a quarter of an inch in width arid maybe about two and one-half inches above the mouth of the socket so as to enable the driller to look through the slot and see when the end of the drill had reached its proper place, and also to furnish an opening for the insertion of a wedge by which the bit was loosened and taken out when thejr were through with it. At least, counsel for Lillard presents his case on the theory that the piece of steel which put out Lil-lard’s eye came from the twisted top end of the drill and escaped through the slot in question as plaintiff 'tapped the drill into the socket. As to whether this theory is correct, or whether the particle of steel came from the point of the' hardened bit where plaintiff was tapping it with his hammer, it is impossible to tell. Plaintiff himself testified he had no idea where it came from, but that he was stooped over with his face about even with the drill, and that maybe'in tapping it too hard he had caused the piece of steel to fly off and strike him in the eye.

*111 The cause was tried, resulting in a verdict and judgment against the railway company in the sum of $2,500, and, from such judgment, the railway company appeals.

Numerous errors are assigned and argued at length; but, as we view the case under the record, and the well-settled rule of law applicable to such cases, there is one material error which ' necessitates a reversal of the judgment, viz.: That the instructions of the court on the duty of the master to furnish safe tools and appliances for the- use of servants, and its duty to inspect them and keep them in repair, were too broad to be properly applicable to the issues made b}r the pleadings and evidence in this case. The theory upon which the plaintiff based his right of recovery was that the bit in question was defective and unfit for use, in that the top end or head of the bit had been twisted off, and that, the plaintiff being compelled by order of the foreman of the machine shops to use a defective bit, and his injuries having resulted from the use of such defective bit, the company should be held liable for the consequences. Upon the other hand, it is contended by the railway company that the bit in question was so simple in its make and construction that any existing defect could, by the exercise of any degree of care and prudence on the part of the plaintiff, have been as easily seen by him as by the master himself, and that therefore the case came within the rule as to simple tools and appliances, and that the court's instructions were inapplicable to that class of tools or appliances, and therefore misleading and erroneous.

The court instructed the jury on this phase of the case as follows:

“You are instructed that it is the duty of the employer to use ordinary care in furnishing to his employees safe and suitable appliances with which to perform the work required of them, and also to see that the same are kept in proper repair, and use ordinary care in making proper inspection of the tools, as will protect the employees against dangers incident to their employment.”

This instruction, it is claimed by plaintiff in error, does' not correctly state the law applicable to the facts in the case at bar, in that it imposes upon the master a higher degree of care than *112 the law requires where the character of tools or appliances to be used are as simple and easily understood as the one in question. A great number of authorities are cited in support of this contention. We believe the contention should be sustained. The bit in question was an ordinary steel blunt-ended bit, with no complications whatever as to its mechanism. The plaintiff testified that he had worked at this kind of work for some time, during which time he had drilled all kinds of holes with these bits, thereby qualifying himself as being just as capable of perceiving any defects in the bit, especially such defect as having the flattened end twisted off, as was the foreman of the machine shops, and it cannot be denied from the record that whatever injury he sustained was caused by attempting to drive this plainly defective bit into the socket. No complication whatever about the bit or the manner of its adjustment. Nothing to do but to place the top end of the bit in the socket and tap it with a hammer or mallet so as to drive it into the slot. The simplicity of the bit is sought to be avoided by defendant in error in his brief by the contention that the drilling machinery was a very complicated, rapid running set of machinery. This may be true; but the defendant was not injured in operating the machinery. Piad the machinery been in operation with all of its complications and powerful forces, and plaintiff received the injury while operating it in an attempt to bore with this defective bit, the rule would have been wholly different. But the machinery was not in operation, nor did the injury result from the operation of the machinery. It resulted from the act on the part of the plaintiff in tapping the bit into the socket, an act just as simple, it seems to us, as putting an ordinary auger bit into a brace, and we must hold, therefore, that the act in which plaintiff, under his own testimony, received the injury comes clearly within the well-settled rule as to the degree of care required of the master in the use of simple tools and appliances, and that the instructions of the court as to the degree of care required were well calculated to mislead the jury to defendant's material prejudice. While the instruction in question may be correct as a general abstract proposition of law, it is an *113 erroneous application of law to the issues involved in the case at bar.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 P. 8, 42 Okla. 109, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-r-i-p-ry-co-v-lillard-okla-1914.