Dunphrey v. Farr & Bailey Manufacturing Co.

85 A. 203, 83 N.J.L. 763, 54 Vroom 763, 1912 N.J. LEXIS 227
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 18, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 85 A. 203 (Dunphrey v. Farr & Bailey Manufacturing Co.) 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
Dunphrey v. Farr & Bailey Manufacturing Co., 85 A. 203, 83 N.J.L. 763, 54 Vroom 763, 1912 N.J. LEXIS 227 (N.J. 1912).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

White, J.

This is a writ of error to review the judgment of nonsuit entered by the Supreme Court in the Camden ■Circuit.

The plaintiff, a carpenter, sixty-two years old, in the employ of defendant, was using a tool, known as a circular saw, which was operated by steam power on a shaft located below the surface of a table, so that the top of the saw extended up about four inches through a small slit in the top of the table, and so that by laying a board upon the table and pushing it against the saw while it revolved, the board could be sawed as desired by the plaintiff then engaged in making boxes and frames for certain concrete work in the defendant’s factory. The work the plaintiff was doing was such as he was accustomed to do, and the tool he was using, the circular saw3 was a kind of tool which he had been well aeeustomed,to use in his trade. At the time the accident happened, the plaintiff was sawing a board about three feet long with this circular saw and was feeding the board to the saw, pushing it from him with his right hand and holding it down on the table with his left hand, when it flew up at the end furthest from him by reason, as he says, of the far edge of the saw, where it comes up through the slit in the top of the table, binding in the cleft which the saw had made in sawing the board, and causing the board to fly up, so that the plaintiff, in an effort to hold it down and prevent its coming up in his face, brought his left hand in contact with the revolving saw, which cut off two fingers and the thumb of his left hand. The plaintiff was, and had been, using this saw frequently, as he did his other tools, and he was obviously in a better position to observe the condition of the tools with which he was working than anyone else. There were a number of other saws banging above tire table before him for him to select [765]*765from and put on the shaft in place of the saw in use should it become desirable for any reason for him to change it.

This being the situation, it is urged that the defendant became liable for this injury because of a notice given by the plaintiff to defendant’s foreman that the saw was in bad condition and a promise by such foreman to have it fixed, accompanied by a direction to the plaintiff to continue using it in the meantime. The evidence to support this contention was given by the plaintiff himself, and is as follows: “Well, Mr. Tucker and I was running the saw and ripping out some strips, and 1 started a strip and the saw commenced to hind, and Billy, the foreman — 1 never heard his last name — he came in and T said, ‘Billy, I can’t use that saw; I think if the saw was set it would have more opening to clear the wood.’ He said, ‘Get somebody to set it for you, and I will have the saws fixed up Saturday afternoon.’ So Mr. Tucker took the saw off and Mr. Diehl set it for me.” This was on Thursday, and the accident happened on the Saturday morning following, x^gain, on cross-examination, the plaintiff testified that lie said to the foreman, “Billy, I can do nothing with this saw, it ought to he set, so as to give more opening to clear the wood,” and the foreman answered, “Well, get somebody to set it;” and again, on redirect examination:

“Q. When von talked to the foreman, Billy, that you spoke of', what was it yon said to him, what did you complain of?
“A. That saw binding.
“Q. And was there anything said why it was binding by either of yon at that time?
“A. At that time, I told him I thought it ought to be set, it would cut easier.
“Q. What did he say to that?
“A. Tie told me to get somebody to set it for me if I didn’t want to do it and Frank Diehl came in and set it.
“Q. He set it?
“A. Yes.”

And, finally, on recross-examination:

“Q. I want to know just what complaints you made to Billy, the foreman, about that saw, as to what was the matter ?
[766]*766“A. Yes, I understand. I said to Billy, that saw needs setting, and Billy said, 'All right, get somebody to set it for you if you don’t want to,’ and I went out of the shop and Frank Diehl came in. Prank Diehl set the saw for me, and Tucker took it and put it on.
“Q. Was there anything else said to Billy, the foreman, by you?
“A. No, only Billy said before he went out he was going to have them fixed up' Saturday afternoon when there wasn’t very much sawing to be done.
“Q. Was that after or before the teeth of the saw were set by Diehl ?
. “A. That was before.”

It is perfectly evident from this testimony that what the plaintiff had in mind when he complained to the foreman, and what the foreman understood from the complaint (for that is exactly- what it said), was not that the saw was out of order in the sense óf increasing the personal danger to the person operating it, but that it was not in condition to do the work as rapidly and as efficiently as it should. The complaint was that the saw “needed setting,” in order for it to do the proper amount of work in a proper manner. To a carpenter, “setting his saw” means with reference to the saw, practically the same thing as “sharpening his axe” means to a woodsman with reference to his axe. It not- only is not extraordinary or unusual, nor a defective condition in the sense in which that term is customarily used, particularly with reference to danger of personal injury, but it is something of constant occurrence and is incidental to the use of the tool in its normal condition. It-becomes necessary to “set” a saw just as it becomes necessary to “sharpen” an axe, and for the same reason, namely, because it becomes dull through use. All saws have to be “set” frequently if in use, just the same as all axes in use have to be frequently sharpened. The cutting efficiency of a saw results from the fact that its edge is shaped into, teeth which, when drawn across the article to be sawed, cut a cleft but of that article the exact width of the thickness of the saw at its cutting edge. If the teeth of the saw remain in [767]*767ilie original plane of tlie remainder of the body or blade of the saw, the width of the cleft which the saw will cut is exactly the same as the thickness of the blade of the saw. When this is so, obviously, the entire blade in revolving or passing through the cleft made by the saw will rub against the sides of that cleft, causing friction, and preventing the saw from doing the work, which friction, of course, will increase as the cleft cuts further into the article. In order to avoid this situation, the teetli of the saw are “set” — that is, every alternate tooth is bent a very little! out of the plane of the blade of the saw in one direction, and the other teeth are bent to the same extent in the opposite direction. This forms a wider cutting surface on the edge of the saw, and, consequently, a wider cleft is cut into the article being sawed, so that the body or blade of the saw will then not be as thick as the cleft is wide and will not touch its sides.

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Bluebook (online)
85 A. 203, 83 N.J.L. 763, 54 Vroom 763, 1912 N.J. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunphrey-v-farr-bailey-manufacturing-co-nj-1912.