Cote v. Jay Manufacturing Co.

98 A. 817, 115 Me. 300, 1916 Me. LEXIS 67
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 10, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 98 A. 817 (Cote v. Jay Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cote v. Jay Manufacturing Co., 98 A. 817, 115 Me. 300, 1916 Me. LEXIS 67 (Me. 1916).

Opinion

Cornish, J.

The plaintiff, a girl fourteen years of age, was injured on November 21, 1914, while in the defendant’s employ. She was working at the rear end of a machine called a planer, used in the manufacture of skewer sticks. This machine was equipped with two cylinders at the front, turning inward and carrying the stock, in shape like a lath, into the machine, with two cylinders near the center supplied with rapidly revolving knives, which cut and planed the stock, and with two cylinders at the rear, turning outward and delivering the finished sticks, in shape like a lead [302]*302pencil, at the sorting table. The knive-cylinders were covered by a Removable box.

One Louis LaPointe, a boy then fifteen years old, worked -at the front of the machine. He operated and had charge of it. He started and’ stopped it by means of a rope connected with a shipper on the floor below, and .he fed in the stock. In case of clogging in the knive cylinders he removed the box and remedied the trouble with the aid of a stick, sometimes when the machine was in operation,- and-sometimes after he had stopped it.

- About two feet from the rear and a little at one side was a table upon which the sticks which came from the machine were sorted. The plaintiff worked at this rear end, taking the sticks as they fell irom the last .cylinders, sorting them upon this table and placing them in different compartments.. This was her job. She had nothing whatever to do with the operation or control of the machine. Her duty was solely with the harmless product.

The first important question is, what was the cause of the accident. The plaintiff claims that the machine clogged,' that LaPointe stopped it, that she in the discharge of her duties was cleaning out the knives with a stick, that LaPointe, without giving her any warning, started the machine and her hand was caught. The fellow servant rule would preclude recovery, even- if this state of facts existed, unless the defendant could be proven guilty of negligence in employing LaPointe or retaining him in its employ, and it is upon this theory of negligence in retaining an incompetent servant that the plaintiff rests her case.

The defendant, on the other hand, contends that when the machine clogged on the day in question, LaPointe removed the cover and endeavored to free the clog while the machine was in motion; that failing in this he bent down and pulled the rope to throw off the speed; that after the belt was unshipped the knives continued to revolve for a time; that the plaintiff placed her hand among the knives before they came to a full stop, and while he was bending down; that it was no part of her duty to free this clog and her act in attempting to do so was purely voluntary and inexcusable.

Upon this issue of the cause of thé accident the jury must have found in favor of the plaintiff. But the finding cannot be sustained. No one saw the occurrence except these two actors. So far as oral [303]*303testimony is concerned we have that of the interested plaintiff on one side and of LaPointe on the other. But the situation itself speaks. The rope which threw the speed on or off was pulled but once. The machine had been in operation, therefore the movement stopped it. Moreover it was found at rest when the superintendent came and extricated the plaintiff from the cylinders. If the plaintiff’s statement is true that LaPointe stopped and then started the machine, it would have been in motion when the plaintiff was removed from her perilous position. But it was still. This fact settles the controversy between the plaintiff and LaPointe and proves the truth of the latter’s version of the accident.

The evidence is also overwhelming that it was no part of the plaintiff’s duty to remove the clog. That was a part of the operation of the machine and was the sole duty of the operator. LaPointe was the operator. The plaintiff herself admits it. The removal of any obstruction devolved upon him. She was employed simply to sort the sticks. The superintendent and LaPointe both so testify, and another girl, who had sorted upon this machine for two years, about half the time with LaPointe as operator, corroborates both. This testimony is entirely consonant with the probabilities. The plantiff says that during her two weeks’ work she had frequently cleaned the knives when the machine had been stopped. LaPointe says she had attempted it but once and then he had forbidden her doing it again. On this first and important point, ini view of all the facts, we see no escape from the conclusion that the plaintiff was performing an uncalled for and inexcusable act, one entirely disconnected from the service for which she had been employed and which she was accustomed to perform.

We might well stop here and ignore the second necessary point in the plaintiff’s chain of proof, the alleged negligence of the defendant in retaining an incompetent servant. If the accident was in no way due to the negligence of LaPointe, it is entirely immaterial whether he was competent or incompetent. That question, strictly speaking, is beside the issue.

But as it is argued by the learned counsel on both sides we will consider it briefly, assuming for this purpose the truth of the plaintiff’s version, and that some negligent act on h,er fellow servant’s part was the cause of her injuries. This proposition involves two [304]*304elements; first, that LaPointe was in fact incompetent, and second, that the master knew that fact or by the use of reasonable diligence should have known it. Robbins v. Street Railway, 107 Maine, 42.

Upon the question of actual incompetence the evidence is negligible. True when LaPointe was first employed by the defendant on this machine he was only thirteen years of age and his employment was in direct violation of P. L. 1909, ch. 257, sec. 2, which prohibits the employment of children under fourteen years of age in manufacturing and mechanical establishments. Had this accident happened before LaPointe reached the age ©f fourteen, the fact of illegal employment would have been competent though not conclusive evidence on the question of defendant’s negligence resulting' from a failure of duty on his part. Jones v. Coöperative Association, 109 Maine, 448. So, too, the plaintiff was employed when under fourteen in contravention of the same statute and had she, before reaching the age of fourteen, received injuries whose proximate cause was the violation of the statutory duty of the employer, then the effect of that statute upon the measure of the defendant’s, liability would have arisen. Berdos v. Tremont Mills, 209 Mass., 489. But this statute is not involved here because both the plaintiff and LaPointe had passed their fourteenth birthday when the accident happened, the plaintiff by nine days and LaPointe by more than a year. The question of competency must relate to the time of the injury and not to the time when the employe first assumed, his duties. Chicago &c. R. R. Co. v. Sullivan, 63 Ill., 293; Harvey v. R. R. Co., 88 N. Y., 481.

Again, even if LaPointe had been in some way negligent at the time of the injury, his incompetency cannot be established by that single act. It requires more than that. “Incompetence in the law of negligence means, want of ability suitable to the task, either as regards natural qualities or experience, or deficiency of disposition to use one’s natural abilities and experience properly.” This definition has been approved by this court in Robbins v. Street Railway,

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Related

Harvey v. . N.Y. Cent. Hudson R.R.R. Co.
88 N.Y. 481 (New York Court of Appeals, 1882)
Berdos v. Tremont & Suffolk Mills
95 N.E. 876 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1911)
Chicago & Alton Railroad v. Sullivan
63 Ill. 293 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1872)

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Bluebook (online)
98 A. 817, 115 Me. 300, 1916 Me. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cote-v-jay-manufacturing-co-me-1916.