Consolidated Barb Wire Co. v. Maxwell

116 Ill. App. 296, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 69
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 14, 1904
DocketGen. No. 4,269
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 116 Ill. App. 296 (Consolidated Barb Wire Co. v. Maxwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Barb Wire Co. v. Maxwell, 116 Ill. App. 296, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 69 (Ill. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Vickers

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit brought by John W. Maxwell against the Consolidated Barb Wire Company to recover damages for an injury sustained by him while in the employ of the plaintiff in error. The trial in the Circuit Court resulted in a verdict in favor of defendant in error for $1,000, from which $5 was remitted and judgment rendered for $995. The defendant company sues out this writ of error to reverse that judgment.

The Consolidated Barb Wire Company was engaged in the manufacture of barb wire at Joliet, Illinois. Defendant in error was in its employ as a machinist, and had general charge of all the machinery used in connection with its factory. The machinery was driven in part by water power and in part by steam. The power house was about 12x14 feet and about twenty feet high, and had three floors in it, the top floor being about thirty inches below the roof.The power from the water wheel was communicated to the sheave wheel, which is hereafter described, by means of an upright shaft, which extended from the water wheel to a point above the third floor of the power house. On the top of this shaft was a bevel wheel which meshed another beveled gear attached to a horizontal shaft upon which the cable or sheave wheel was fixed. The cable wheel was supported by two timbers 12x12 extending east and west in the power house. The cable wheel was nine feet ten inches in diameter, and had a grooved rim in which the cable ran. The cable wheel was made of iron, but the inside of the groove where the cable ran was lined with a composition made of rubber and canvas to prevent the cable from coming in contact with the metal, and to give it retaining power. The upper line of the cable ran through a hole in the roof and- extended across the Illinois and Michigan canal to where the machinery was located, which was operated by this water power. The composition inside this rim of the cable wheel had a tendency to wear away by the friction of the cable, and when this ivould occur in such way as to cause the cable to run to one side of the groove it became necessary to cut out a groove in the composition in the center of the.cable-wheel rim.

On the 27th day of March,_ 1898, the superintendent of the factory asked the defendant in error to do some work on the cable wheel at the power house, telling him that the cable had been running bad, and telling him that he would look up the tools necessary to do the job, and that the defendant in error would find the tools lying on a certain cupboard. On the following morning the defendant in error went to the factory to do the work, and on the cupboard he found a steel tool about twenty-four inches long, two inches wide and five-eighths of an inch thick, shaped like a spoon, with a hole a short distance from the cutting edge for the chips to fall through, and he also found an iron plate five inches thick, two inches wide and fifteen or twenty inches in length, with a hole in either end.

Defendant in error went to the cable wheel, but did not begin work at once. He returned to the factory and had a conversation with Isaac Burkhart, mill foreman of plaintiff in error, who had charge of the mill in the absence of Mr. Hewby; Mr. Burkhart told defendant in error that the work to be done was to cut out a groove in the cable wheel so that the cable would run in the center of the wheel, and Burkhart also told defendant in error that the tools which he had were all right to do the work and go ahead. Defendant in error proceeded to cut out the groove in the cable wheel by putting the plate of iron on the pegs in the beams that supported the wheel, and using this plate as a rest to support the tool he used to cut the groove while he held the other end in his hand. The wheel was revolving toward defendant in error, making about twenty revolutions per minute. After defendant in error had been at work for an hour and a half the point of the spoon-shaped tool caught in the composition he was cutting out, the end in his hand flew up and caught his hand between the tool and the flange of the wheel, cutting off the thumb of his left hand.

Defendant in error was an experienced machinist; he had been engaged in the business of running machinery and overseeing its operation for twenty-four years; he was employed by plaintiff in error as master mechanic because of his skill and general knowledge of machinery, and charged with the duty of looking after the machinery in this factory of which the cable wheel was a part; and the case must be determined in the light of his experience, knowledge and skill, and his relation to the work in which he was engaged at the time of the accident.

The charge in the declaration is that the injury was caused by the failure of plaintiff in error to furnish a clamp or clutch to hold the steel tool securely and prevent its being jerked out of defendant in error’s hands in case the point or cutting edge got hung in the rubber, and negligently ordering and requiring the defendant in error to work in a dangerous place without sufficient and reasonably safe tools and appliances. To support the claim of an order of plaintiff in error to work in a dangerous place and without sufficient and suitable tools, the testimony of plaintiff in error as to the conversation with Newby the morning before and with Burkhart on the morning of the accident, is relied on.

The insufficiency of the appliances or tools furnished consists entirely of the alleged absence of the clutch or clamp to hold the end of the steel tool to keep it from being thrown upward when the point cut too deep into the wheel. Mr. Pierce, who xvas the man who had cut the groove out of this wheel four or five times previous to the accident, the last time being two months before Maxwell was hurt, says of the clamps, that he always left them in the tower house when the work was done. It does not appear from the testimony where the clamps were on the morning of the accident, nor does it appear that either Newby or Burkhart knew they were not in the tower house where the work was to be done, and it is not shown that these clamps could be used for any other purpose or that any one would have any occasion for removing them from the toxver. Keeping in mind that the'tools shown Burkhart and which he said were all right, were in fact the tools and the only tools with which the work had ever been done, when held in place by the clamp, and also the fact that the defendant in error was a skilled machinist employed as master mechanic for the purpose of repairing and keeping the machinery in order, is defendant in error relieved from the assumption of the risk incident to the work in which he was engaged at the time of the accident?

Under the state of the proofs in this record, we think the question whether the injury resulted from an assumed risk is one of law, and was properly raised by plaintiff in error’s-request for an instruction to direct a verdict at the close of all the evidence. Whether or not an injured party can be said to have assumed the risk, is usually a question of fact, but this is not always true; when the evidence is harmonious and consistent, the question whether the risk is an assumed one becomes a question of law. C. & A. R. R. Co. v. Howell, 208 Ill. 155.

The doctrine of assumed risk does not depend on the care .or want of care for the servant but grows out of the contract of employment or continuance in the service after knowledge of defects and -without objection. Chicago & Eastern Illinois R. R. Co. v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rahm v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.
108 S.W. 570 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1908)
Bokamp v. Chicago & Alton Railway Co.
100 S.W. 689 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 Ill. App. 296, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-barb-wire-co-v-maxwell-illappct-1904.