Dillenberger v. Weingartner

45 A. 638, 64 N.J.L. 292, 35 Vroom 292, 1900 N.J. LEXIS 110
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 5, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 45 A. 638 (Dillenberger v. Weingartner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillenberger v. Weingartner, 45 A. 638, 64 N.J.L. 292, 35 Vroom 292, 1900 N.J. LEXIS 110 (N.J. 1900).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Lippincott, J.

The plaintiff sues the defendants to recover damages for personal injuries inflicted on her on the 4th day of January, 1897, while she was engaged in the factory of the defendants, in endeavoring to lower the sash of a window, in the frame of which there was a steam revolving fan. She alleges that she was injured by reason of her hand coming in contact with the fan. Her left hand was much cut and she lost her thumb and some fingers, and her hand was otherwise injured.

The plaintiff was a servant in the employment of the defendants. She was about thirty-two years of age, and employed as a presser or ironer of. corsets in the factory of the defendants. The evidence shows that she had been employed there about six months, and was thoroughly acquainted with the manner in which the work was performed, and the operation of the fan. She was engaged in two rooms of the factory • one was the ironing-room and the other was a sprink[294]*294ling, dampening or steam-room. In this latter room there was a sink at which corsets were dampened by hot water or steam before being pressed or ironed. The ironing-room was the larger of the two rooms, the steam-room being separated from the ironing-room by a wooden partition, and was about twelve feet in length by about four feet in width. In this room were two wooden steam-troughs along the west side, one of which was immediately in front of and below a window which was at one end of this room, in the wall thereof, leading into the open air. The steam-trough under this window was about four feet high, and about three feet wide, and the sides being about an inch thick. The upper sash of this window was the inside one in the window frame, and the lower sash the outside one. The upper sash had in front of it, on the inside, a revolving fan in its frame, for the purpose of discharging the steam from the room, and the fan, with the frame, covered the whole of the upper sash, but unconnected with it, and leaving a space of about a foot or a little less between the fan and its frame and the upper sash—that is, projecting that far into the room; the upper sash was movable up and down, so that it might be opened when the fan was in motion, for the purpose of discharging the steam from the room. Overhanging the trough there was a steam-jet, which was used by the ironers for the purposes of dampening the corsets before they were ironed. The ironing-room was large enough to accommodate between twenty and thirty ironers, but the steam-room, with its two troughs, was only large enough for two ironers at one time. All the evidence on this subject shows that about ten minutes’ work at the steam-jet will dampen enough corsets to keep a hand busy for more than an hour, and each of the ironers so engaged take their turn in the steam-room to dampen the corsets upon which they are at work. When the machinery in the factory is set going in the morning it causes the fan to revolve also. It makes over seven hundred revolutions per minute, and its operation by reason of its noise and motion is distinctly observable by all employed in the room. It is also in plain [295]*295view, as well as the space between it and the upper sash of the window. The plaintiff had been employed at her work in this room and the pressing-room adjoining for over six months, and was daily, several times a day, engaged in this steam-room in which the accident happened.

On the morning of this accident the plaintiff, with another womau, went into this room as soon as they came into the factory, with corsets to be dampened at the steam-jet. The plaintiff took her corsets to the steam-jet, over the trough, above which the revolving fan in the window was placed. The steam was shut off and the fan was in operation, and the upper sash of the window was closed. She turned the steam-jet to go to work, when she noticed that the upper sash of the window was closed. She turned off the steam and then undertook to lower this sash of the window for the purpose of affording an escape of the steam which would come from the steam-jet, and in endeavoring to do so she put her hand, either wholly or partly, into the fan, and it was injured very severely.

The evidence on the part of the plaintiff shows, during her employment in this factory, she had seen this fan in daily operation. She saw the fan put in its frame in the window and had observed its operation from day to day, and she knew it was dangerous for anyone to put the hand into it, through it or to touch it. She saw that there were flanges with spaces between them, and that when it was revolving it looked as if there was a space between the rim of the moving fan and the inside of its frame, but she knew, also, that this space was a deceptive one. She also was entirely aware of its location in respect to the space between the fan and the sash.

When she attempted to lower the upper sash behind the fan, she testifies that she saw it was revolving and going very fast. She says that there was but little or no steam in the room at that time.

She is, in parts of her evidence, uncertain of the manner in which she attempted to take hold of the sash of the window [296]*296behind the fan to lower it, or whether she took hold of it at all. Site knew that there existed the space between the upper window sash and the frame of the fan, and that the proper way to lower it was to reach below the frame of the fan, take hold of the sash and pull or push it down, and thus the hand would be entirely free from any contact with the fan in front of the sash.

She. says that she had never attempted to open the window before this time, that it was the work of the first woman who arrived in that room in the morning, and that she was the first one to arrive this morning.

There is other evidence that it was not a part of her work to open the window, that it was the work of the foreman of the defendants, and that when it was necessary to have the window opened he was called to open it. However that may be, this case is treated as if the opening of the window was a part of the work of this plaintiff or of her co-servants engaged with her in this employment.

In order to draw down the upper sash, she testifies that she kneeled on both knees upon the rim of the trough at which she was standing and working, and braced herself with her right hand against the partition, and with her left hand reached up to lower the upper sash. 'She testifies further that she cannot tell how her hand slipped into the fan, and that when she was hurt she did not have hold of the sash of the window. Again, she testifies that she could see the whole frame of the upper sash. Again, she says she could not see it because the fan was running “so quick.” After the jury had taken a view of the premises, she being there with the jury, and, seeing the fan in the window, she is recalled, and the following questions were put to her :

“Q. Since you have seen the fan in the window, has it recalled to your memory where it was you took hold ?
“A. Well, I took hold of the frame of the fan ; I thought that was the frame of the window, so I took hold of the frame of the fan.”

And again :

[297]*297“Q. Did you put your hand on the wooden frame?
“A. Yes, sir; just to push it down.
“Q. On the wooden frame?
“A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 A. 638, 64 N.J.L. 292, 35 Vroom 292, 1900 N.J. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillenberger-v-weingartner-nj-1900.