Claudio v. Cortinez

9 P.R. 97
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 19, 1905
DocketNo. 54
StatusPublished

This text of 9 P.R. 97 (Claudio v. Cortinez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Claudio v. Cortinez, 9 P.R. 97 (prsupreme 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice MacLeaby

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action brought on the 7th of July, 1904, by Claudio, who is a baker, against the Union Society, a firm carrying on a bakery, for $2,000 damages on account of injuries suffered by him on the 27th of April, 1904, from the loss of his left arm in the machinery of said bakery, while at work as an employe of the respondent at its bakery in the city of San Juan.

The action is based on the provisions of the act of the 1st of March, 1902, which is found in the Revised Statutes of Porto Rico on pages 150 to 156, inclusive. The sum claimed is the maximum of the recovery allowed by that statute. (Revised Statutes,P. R., section 323.)

The facts as detailed by the witnesses may be stated fully as follows:

The witness Hermenegildo Claudio, plaintiff and appellee herein, who resides in Norzagaray street, San Juan, a baker by trade, and formerly an employe of the bakery “La Union,” defendant and appellant herein, téstified that he had worked for defendant more than nine years and that in the said bakery the dough is worked by means of machinery; that he lost his left arm in an accident while working in the said bakery with the kneader, a part of the machinery; that the [99]*99firm dismissed the machinist and he called the attention of Mr. Oortinez, the superintendent, to the fact that at'tlie time least expected an-accident would occur, and that the said Cor-tinez replied that the machine was nothing, that anyone could understand it; that he (witness) afterwards told his fellow-workmen the same thing; that nothing was done about the matter, and the machinist told him (witness) the same thing; that he said he (witness) could do nothing; that he was working and had contracted to work as baker with a salary of $40 a month; that he received direct orders from Mr. Oortinez through the foreman to work with the machine; that he is married, has a family, and that the loss of his arm renders it impossible for him to continue working at his trade. He further testified in reply to questions put by the defense that as there is no machinist the baker is compelled to act as baker and machinist; that on the day the accident occurred the foreman ordered him to take out the dough, and that as he had to attend to everything, while he was attending to some of the arms the other arms came and caught him; that the dough-machine is run by an electric motor and is put in motion by a dynamo; that in order to start the machine it is necessary to touch the dynamo; that the danger is in the dough-machine; that when a machinist is in charge of the dough-machine the bakers have nothing to do with it, they only have to stand there and feed in the dough; that it was in taking out the dough ¡that the accident occurred, and when there is a machinist the bakers attend to that duty. Again replying to questions put by the plaintiff’s counsel, the witness testified that .the motor by which the machine is run stands “about as far as from here to the clock” from the machine where the accident occurred.

The witness, José Gavino Davila, a resident of Santurce, a baker by trade, and an employe in the defendant’s bakery, testified that he supposes the dough-machine which caused the accident is the same one which, was used at the time when the same was run by steam; that he does not know whether the [100]*100plaintiff ever. complained to Mr. Cortinez of the clanger of the machine or not; that he never heard the plaintiff say anything in regard to the danger; that, the .day on which the accident occurred the injured party was working at the dough-machine with another man, one on each side of the machine, one to take out the dough and the other to steer the machine; that the dough-machine is about two or three meters distant from the motor which runs it; that the motor is attached to the wall about the height of a man with his arm' upraised, or a little higher,than the 'dough-machine. In reply .to questions put by the defense the same witness testified that he, José Dávila, was the employe working at the machine with the plaintiff the day the accident occurred, steering the machine by means of some sort of steering-gear which he calls a bridle; that the man managing the said steering-gear cannot stop the machine when it is in motion. Further replying to questions put by the plaintiff’s counsel the same witness testified that the motor was not near the steering’ gear, and that it would require seconds only for a man to reach the motor and stop the machine if he was' in charge of the steering gear of the machine. ■

The witness José Negrón, resident of Puerta de Tierra, and a machinist by trade, who was formerly employed by the bakery to run the machine by steam, but who was dismissed upon the installation of the electric motor, testified that the dough-machine now in use in the said bakery is the same one used when steam was employed as the motive power, the only difference being that it is now propelled by electric'power ; that when the motor was installed he was retained with a. salary of $10 per month; that if an experienced machinist had been in charge of the dough-mixer at the time, the accident would not have occurred, because while one man attended to both things the machine ran at full speed; that with a. machinist in charge the danger in the machine is to such machinist. In reply to questions put by thé defense -the same witness testified that he as machinist never put his. [101]*101hands in the place where the dough was being mixed, that it was not his duty to do so, but the dnty of the baker; that, supposing he had been in charge of the machine, as it is now run by electric power, and the plaintiff had put his hands in amongst those crooked arms of the machine, he as machinist could not have avoided the accident; that if Hermenegildo Claudio had put his hands in the place where the dough was in order to clean the arms of the machine he could not have avoided the accident, but that at such times formerly when they were cleaning the machine he was at the throttle of the steam engine. Again replying to questions put by the plaintiff, the same witness testified that if he had been in charge of the steam-engine which used to run the machinery the baker would not have had to attend to any machinery, nor put his hands about the same, but only to wait until the dough came out and keep it from falling on the floor; that if there had been a machinist in charge of the dough-mixer and the machinery there would have been no necessity for the baker to put his hands in or about the machine. To a question put by the court the same witness testified that the machine could be stopped by means of a wheel; that there is a fly-wheel which works on a shaft, and another which works on a double cog; that all the movements of the machine are stopped by the wheel; that the arms of the same are controlled by a lever; that the arm which caught Clatidio can be stopped instantly; that the whole movement of the machine can be stopped by touching an electric button; that the machine used for mixing the dough can be stopped by means of the wheQl.

Tjhe witness Secundino Santana, a baker by trade, who was the foreman in charge of the bakery on the day the plaintiff met with this accident, testified that he was the one who gave orders; that it was customary to stop the machinery when the dough was emptied out, and he ordered Hermene-gildo Claudio to attend to this work, and he then, heard one of his fellow-workmen cry out: “It is killing him!” That [102]

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Bluebook (online)
9 P.R. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claudio-v-cortinez-prsupreme-1905.