Dame v. Skillin

88 A. 408, 111 Me. 156, 1913 Me. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 8, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 88 A. 408 (Dame v. Skillin) 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
Dame v. Skillin, 88 A. 408, 111 Me. 156, 1913 Me. LEXIS 96 (Me. 1913).

Opinion

King, J.

This is an action to recover damages for injuries received 'by the plaintiff while in the employ of the defendant and engaged in operating a steam flat-piece ironer or mangle. The action is based on the alleged negligence of the defendant.

The plaintiff was sixteen and a half years old at the time of the accident. She had worked in defendant’s laundry about a year and a 'half, most of the time operating a 'steam mangle, and she had operated the mangle on which she was injured about six weeks — all the time after it was put in the laundry up to the 24th day of August, 1911, when she was injured.

This mangle is an approved type of flatipiece ironer commonly used in laundries. We may not be able to describe it well without the aid of the photograph put in evidence. It consists of a large steam-heated cylinder about eight feet long, placed horizontally, over which are two or more heavy rollers of the same length covered with canvass. The cylinder and' rollers revolve in opposite directions, and are so close together that sheets, pillow slips1, towels and other articles to be ironed are drawn in between the cylinder and rollers as they revolve and are ironed as they pass through. A horizontal shelf or feed plate, so called, about ten inches wide, is placed lengthwise of, and as close to the surface of the cylinder as practicable and not .be in contact with it, the line of its plane striking the cylinder some distance below its top. In front of the feed plate is the feed roll which revolves in the same direction with the cylinder. Ten ribbons, or strips of fabric, called “feed-strips” or “apron-strips,” pass up around the feed roller and across the surface of the feed plate and in between the cylinder and rollers. These feed-strips move as the feed roll and cylinder move, and pass around and around through the machine. The article to be ironed1 is placed smooth on [158]*158the apron-strips and as these move it is .carried along and in between the cylinder and rollers. There is also a guard roll extending the length of the machine and placed in front of the point of contact of the cylinder and upper roller. This guard roll appears to be 4 or 5 inches in diameter, and is covered with canvass like the larger rolls. It rests at either end and revolves in bearings on swinging arms iwhich permit it to be lifted up bodily around to the top of the first roll, if necessary, keeping always its relative distance from the surface of that roll. This guard roll is so hung that, unless lifted by some force, it touches the apron strips, and its top is about an inch and a half from the surface of the larger roll above it — it being somewhat under the larger roll, so that a perpendicular line dropped down 'by the front side of the larger roll would strike near the center of the guard roll. The guard roll revolves downward and inward, and is turned by the friction of the apron-strips passing under it, and also by the force and effect of several (seventeen) twine strings placed at equal distances apart and drawn tight down over the upper rolls and under the guard roll. As the larger rolls revolve the strings move, turning the 'guard roll as they .pass under it. The way in which the guard roll is hung, on the movable arms, permits some upward movement of it should articles passing under it be or become of uneven thickness. Its purpose is to prevent articles from going into the machine crooked and uneven, for unless the articles are smooth and even when they reach this guard roll they will not pass under it on the apromstrips, but bunch up in front of it, and the operator can safely take them away and smooth them out. If the guard roll does not revolve then the articles, though smooth and even, will not pass under it, but 'bunch up in front of it. It appears from the evidence that if a considerable number of the strings are broken (and they frequently break being of ordinary twine) the guard roll will stop revolving. The distance from the center of the top of the guard roll to the steam-heated cylinder beyond is “between five and five and a half inches.”

The plaintiff was injured by her right hand going in over the top of the guard roll and being drawn in between the steam-heated cylinder and the large roll above it. It appears that at the time of the accident so many of the strings were .broken that the guard roll bothered and did not revolve constantly. The plaintiff thus stated [159]*159■how the accident occurred: “Well, I took my pillow slip and I put it here and1 it went as far as that little roll fight here, and it would not go any further because it bunched all up, and I pulled it back and laid it again, and it Went as far as that little roll, and when it did go as far as that, I put my hand on that little roll here, just my fingers, and pulled it toward me so the pillow slip would go in. That is just how I done it that night.” (Indicating on photograph.)

It seems evident that the plaintiff put her finger so far into the little space between the top of the guard roll and the larger roll above it that her 'hand was drawn in between that roll and the steam-heated cylinder.

The chief claim in her behalf at the trial was that she was not sufficiently instructed as to the danger incident to operating this machine, or, to be more specific, of the danger in turning the guard roll with her hands.

It is alleged in her writ “that she was entirely inexperienced in laundry work and in the operation and handling of any kind of machinery.” That allegation is not sustained by the evidence. On the other 'hand she had worked in this laundry for about a year and a 'half, operating a steam mangle most of the time, and had operated this particular mangle for six weeks. It is also alleged that she was of immature intelligence. But no evidence was offered to support that allegation, and we do not think such ,a conclusion is justified by her own testimony, for that shows her to have been a girl of at least average intelligence for one of her age and circumstances. Indeed it was she Who operated the odd mangle for about a year and a half, and who was put in charge of the new one when it was installed; and when two girls worked at the mangle it was the plaintiff who had the right hand side of 'the machine and operated the lever in starting and stopping it. 'That does not indicate that she was regarded by her employer, or those who worked with her, as a person of immature intelligence.

If it did not so appear in evidence, it would still be reasonable to infer that the plaintiff, both from observation and actual experience in operating a mangle for a year and a half, must have obtained knowledge of the method of its operation, and must have had full opportunity to ascertain and appreciate any risks incident to the use of such a machine. ' But it does so appear in evidence. In her [160]*160testimony the plaintiff discloses that she understood clearly how the machine operated' in doing its work. She knew that the cylinder within was heated, and that there was a similar heated cylinder in the old mangle; that it revolved in contact with the large rolls over it, and that the guard roll was placed in front of the point of contact of the cylinder and rolls for protection, to prevent articles from being drawn in between the cylinder and rolls when they ought not to go in there.

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Bluebook (online)
88 A. 408, 111 Me. 156, 1913 Me. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dame-v-skillin-me-1913.