Cole v. Mamer Brick Co.

149 N.W. 1044, 183 Mich. 290, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 685
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1914
DocketDocket No. 126
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 149 N.W. 1044 (Cole v. Mamer Brick 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
Cole v. Mamer Brick Co., 149 N.W. 1044, 183 Mich. 290, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 685 (Mich. 1914).

Opinion

Steere, J.

On August 2, 1912, plaintiff was injured by falling through, an unguarded opening at the edge of a platform upon which he was working in the upper part of a one-story building of defendant in which brick was being manufactured. Imputing the accident and his resulting injuries to the negligence of defendant, by whom he was employed, through failure to furnish him a safe place in which to work, he brought this action in the circuit court of Berrien county, where he recovered a verdict and judgment of $600, awarded as compensation for such personal injuries. Numerous exceptions were taken during the trial, and errors have been carefully assigned upon them, presenting in various lights defendant’s reasons why the judgment ought not to be sustained, the condensed substance of which is that no negligence on its part is shown, that the platform was in a reasonably safe condition, that plaintiff is shown by his own testimony to have been guilty of contributory negligence; for all of which reasons a verdict should have been directed for defendant and the verdict of the lower court should now be reversed and no new trial granted.

Defendant owned and operated a plant for the manufacture of brick near the city of Benton Harbor. Clay for making the brick came from a nearby bank and was conveyed into the upper part of the factory building by small dump cars operated on a tramway running from the bank into the building through an opening in its gable end, within the pitch of the roof, at an elevation of over 18 feet above the ground floor upon which the brick machine set, with other equipment above it. They were drawn into the building from about 150 feet distant by a cable, power for which was furnished from the building. The tram car dumped at the side and discharged the clay into a hopper conveniently near the track Over the machin[292]*292ery, from where it fell into a so-called granulator, thence passing by gravity through other appliances, essential to the process of manufacture until it reached the brick machine at the bottom. In the southeast corner of the building, adjacent to the place of dumping and slightly below the level of the track, was a platform for the person engaged in caring for and dumping the car to stand upon while doing such work. It was 12 feet long by 7 feet wide, and 18 feet above the ground floor, from which it was reached by a stairway. It extended a little over 6 feet to the east of the car track and, had it continued 5½ feet further east, would have connected with the side of the building near where it joined the slanting roof. This left, from the outer edge of the platform to the roof, an opening variously stated to be from 2 feet 6 inches to 3 feet 2 inches wide. Plaintiff fell through this opening to the floor beneath while engaged in dumping a car, striking first upon the line shaft and from there upon a barrel 11 feet beneath, sustaining, as he testified, serious injuries.

The car, known as the Western Side Dump Car, was a small one, holding from 1% to 2 yards of clay, and was emptied by releasing two chain hooks on one side, revolving or tipping the box of the car until its contents slid out, then pulling back or righting the box and refastening the chains. This could easily be done by hand. It was claimed by defendant that such was the proper way, and plaintiff had been so instructed. It was his custom to right the box by reaching; from where he stood on the platform and catching over the edge of the box with the heel of a shovel, which he used around the place of emptying for various purposes, and then pulling towards him until the box was righted. He claimed this was an expeditious and customary way of doing it, practiced by himself and others, including the Mamer brothers under whom he [293]*293worked, and he had never been instructed to the contrary.

On the occasion in question, while righting a car in this manner, his shovel slipped and he fell backwards, going through the opening at the edge of the platform and next to the wall “head first — right backwards,” as he described the event.

The ground of negligence upon which plaintiff seeks recovery is that by reason of the opening through which he fell being left uncovered and unguarded defendant was culpably delinquent in its duty to provide him a safe place in which to work. Plaintiff was a man of age and experience, familiar with his work and the conditions which surrounded it. He began his employment there in June, and the accident occurred on August 2d. The opening complained of was seen by him daily, and whatever dangers it created were known to him.

It is a familiar and well-settled rule of law that an employee assumes the known risks of his employment, both those ordinarily incident to the nature of it and those arising, and becoming known to him, in connection with it as carried on during his service. It is also a familiar rule that, if the employee continues in an employment with knowledge of dangerous conditions involving an abnormal risk relying upon a promise of the employer to remedy such conditions, he is relieved from the onus of having assumed such risk during a reasonable time for the promised repairs or changes to be made.

Plaintiff claims to have complained to his employers of the dangers which resulted in his injury and to have remained at his employment on the strength of promises to cover the opening and remove the risk. Defendant, denying the existence of any abnormal danger, or any promise to repair, contends in any event it is shown that plaintiff did not continue in the [294]*294employ by reason of such promise, nor in reliance upon it, and his own testimony discloses he remained for such an unreasonable length of time after the alleged promise was made that, as a matter of law, it affords him no protection, and he therefore cannot recover. Plaintiff’s counsel clearly state the vital issue in their brief as follows:

“There is only one question in this case: Did the time that elapsed between the promise to repair and plaintiff’s injury ‘preclude all reasonable expectation that the promise might be kept?’ ”

Eliminating all issues raised by conflicting evidence and taking plaintiff’s testimony as true, he testified, amongst other things, that in this building there were four men working besides himself, and he had charge of the “whole thing,” looked after all the machinery, did the oiling, if anything needed fixing about the machines he fixed it, “and looked after everything in that room;” that he rigged a jack “up there” for dumping cars, because they were sometimes loaded heavier on one side and hard to lift; that he added one additional plank to the platform, on his own initiative, and placed a railing on the left side of it, about which he first spoke to “them” and was told to “fix it;” that he looked at this hole a number of times; did not know as he was afraid of it, but thought there was some danger of slipping and falling through it; that it would take but a short time, might take longer than 15 minutes but not over an hour, to cover the opening, requiring but two or three plank, and that there were plank in the yard which could be used for that purpose, and were used after he was hurt; that on one occasion Peter Mamer came up, and, noticing the jack which plaintiff had rigged, asked about it, and spoke in that connection of fixing something else also, in reply to which plaintiff said, “Now, Pete, that arrangement I have got is all right, provided there is [295]

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Bluebook (online)
149 N.W. 1044, 183 Mich. 290, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-mamer-brick-co-mich-1914.