Chicago Veneer Co. v. Jones

135 S.W. 430, 143 Ky. 21, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 331
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 18, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 135 S.W. 430 (Chicago Veneer Co. v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago Veneer Co. v. Jones, 135 S.W. 430, 143 Ky. 21, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 331 (Ky. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion of the CouRt by

Chief Justice Hobson

Affirming.

[22]*22The Chicago Veneer Company employed Thomas J. .iones as an electrician to wire its plant, and put in a system of electric lights. While he was doing the work which occupied him some weeks, Jones had his eye put out by a screwdriver which he was using, and brought this suit against the company and its foreman, Duberry, lo recover for his injury. On the first trial of the case ■there was a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $5,-000.00. The court granted a new trial on motion of the defendants. The case was tried a second time resulting in a verdict in favor of Jones for $7,000.00. The court refused to grant a new trial, and entered judgment upon the verdict. The defendants appeal.

The proof for the plaintiff on the trial showed in substance these facts: Jones was working in a room under the charge of Duberry, and was placed by the superintendent under Duberry’s orders. In- wiring the room Jones had to place cleats upon the rafters to hold the wire. There was no ceiling and Jones used a ladder in doing the work where the machinery was not in the way, but at one end of the room he could not use the ladder on account of the machinery. Duberry then gave him a board and told him to place it on the joists and sit on the board while putting on the cleats. A line of shafting ran through the room, and from this line of shafting a belt ran to a veneer machine on the floor, (he pulley over which the belt ran at the machine being only a few inches above the floor. The timbers which held the line of shafting were not well secured, and Duberry as attention having been previously called to ¡he vibration in consequence of this, he had said in substance, “Leave it alone for the present.” While Jones was working on the board as directed by Duberry and without any knowledge of the trouble or defect in the appliances, a pile of veneer was allowed to accumulate at the veneer machine about the belt. A piece of veneer was caught in the belt, and carried up with it to the shafting causing the shafting to jerk, and giving the joists on which J ones was working a violent vibration, which nearly threw Jones off the board on which he was sitting. He caught so as to prevent himself from falling, but in so doing the screwdriver, with which he was putting in a screw, was stuck in his eye, destroying the ball of the eve. He at once procured the best medical treatment, yet he lost not only that eye, but the sight of the other [23]*23eye was very seriously affected. He suffered very intensely and has been compelled entirely to give up his evocation as an electrician. These are- the facts in substance testified to by Jones, and his testimony as to how 1he accident occurred is supported by two other witnesses who were present and saw it.

On the other hand the proof for the defendant is that Duberry simply told Jones where he wanted the lights to be, and that he left Jones entirely to follow his own course in doing the work without giving him any other directions; that he did not give him a board, or tell him to get on the joists or know that he was on them; that there was no defect in the timbers that held the fine of shafting, and that a piece of veneer going in the belt would not produce an appreciable vibration or jar; that there was no necessity for Jones to get on the joists, and he had gotten there for his own convenience without Duberry’s knowledge; that in sitting on the board his head would be against the roof; and that his injury was due to the screwdriver accidently slipping off the screw when he thus had his head very close to it. The defendant introduced three or four witnesses who proved declarations by Jones tending to show that the injury thus occurred.

On this evidence the court refused to instruct the jury peremptorily to find for the defendants, and instructed them in effect as follows: 1. If Jones was employed by the veneer company to place in its plant electric wires and fixtures, and went to the place where he was directed to go by the company or its foreman, Duberry, to perform ■ the work, then it was the duty of the company and its foreman to use ordinary care to have and keep the place where the plaintiff was at work in a reasonably safe condition so as not to increase the danger to his personal safety, while there engaged in the work, and if the timbers upon which he was located at work were in an unsafe condition, and the company or Duberry negligently permitted scraps of veneering to accumulate upon the floor about the belting and any of the scraps became entangled therein on account of close proximity to the belting, and the company or Duberry knew or by the use of ordinary care could have known of the defective condition of the timbers,and of the accumulation of scraps of veneering about the belting, and Jones did not know [24]*24of same and by reason of the scraps of veneering becoming entangled in the belting, the belting caused the timbers on which plaintiff was at the time located at wort to vibrate in such a manner as not to be reasonably safe, and to throw the plaintiff and the screwdriver from the position in which they were then located, thereby causing the screwdriver to strike the plaintiff’s eye, and destroy the sight of the eye, they should find for the plaintiff. 2. Although there was negligence on the part of the defendants as set out in No. 2, yet if the plaintiff himself failed to use ordinary care in the performance of his work, and but for this the injury would not have occurred, they should find for the defendants. 3. When Jones entered into the service of the defendants to wire their plant, he assumed all the ordinary risks and hazards incident to that employment, and if the injury complained of was the direct and natural result of some one or more of these risks or hazards, they should find for the defendants. 4. Negligence means a failure to use ordinary care. Ordinary care means sueh care as ordinarily prudent persons would be reasonably expected to use under like circumstances.

It is insisted for the defendants that the court should have instructed the jury peremptorily to find for them because the injury was the result of one of the ordinary hazards of the business or was an accident without fault on their part. We cannot concur in this view. When Jones went to work in the factory, and was placing the wires about the running machinery, he took the risk of all those things which were incidental to the operation of the machinery in the ordinary manner, and with ordinary care. He cannot complain of such vibration as was due to the ordinary operation of the machinery; but if the timbers had been allowed to get loose and the veneer was allowed to accumulate about the belt, and get in the belt, thus causing the shafting to give such a jerk as to throw a man off his balance on a board, and require him to catch to save himself from falling, this would not be a risk incident to the proper operation of the machinery, but a risk created by the negligence of the defendants. If Hub err y knew that the timbers were loose, and knew that the veneer was liable to get in the belt, and give it a jerk of this sort, he should have warned Jones of the danger instead of giving him the board and sending him [25]*25np on the joists to do the work in ignorance of the peril attending its performance. No duty of inspection was imposed upon Jones; he had a right to assume that he conld do safely what he was directed by Duberry to do, and there is nothing in the evidence to show that the risk was patent or so obvious that a man of ordinary prudence should have perceived the danger.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 S.W. 430, 143 Ky. 21, 1911 Ky. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-veneer-co-v-jones-kyctapp-1911.