Gendron Iron Wheel Co. v. Santschi

17 Ohio C.C. 723
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ohio C.C. 723 (Gendron Iron Wheel Co. v. Santschi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gendron Iron Wheel Co. v. Santschi, 17 Ohio C.C. 723 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

BENTLEY, J.

Mr. Santschi recovered a judgment against the Gendron Iron Wheel Company, in the court of common pleas, for $4,500, for an injury suffered by him while employed by the company, by the bursting of an emery wheel.

Various errors are assigned in the petition in error, but none were argued or relied on in this court except those founded upon the claim that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence.

The faots, as claimed by the plaintiff below, are these: On May 4, 1890, the plaintiff, a young man of about twenty-six years of age, had been working for the plaintiff in error for some days about their factory, here in Toledo, where machinery was run and bicycles and other articles were manufactured. His work was net confined to any certain kind of employment, but, as he expressed it, he was “working at most everything. ”

On May 14, he was, by one of the foremen of the company, put to work át an emery wheel running at a high rate of speed, grinding small protuberances cr burrs left in casting one of the small iron parts of bicycles, called “binders. ” He had been thus working nearly all day, having no notioe or knowledge of any defect in the emery wheel or of any danger from its swift revolution, and along late in the afternoon the wheel burst, and, its motion being towards him-, one of the flying pieces of the wheel hit him on the head and severely injured him. He claims that, in fact, the emery [724]*724wheel was defective; that a small piece had fallen out of it the day before while another workman was grinding on it, and that that workman had promptly called the attention of the said foreman to it and had refused to work longer upon it, and that, thereupon, the wheel was taken from its place on the left end of the shaft and placed on the right end of the same shaft, and another emery wheel which had up to that time been on the right hand end of the shaft,was placed on the left end; in short, that said two wheels were changed about, but said defective wheel was allowed to run in its new place, and that the defect was such as would render it dangerous and liable to burst, to the knowledge of the company, and that it did burst by reason of said defect and the high rate of speed at which it was run.

Some question was made as to whether the person who set the plaintiff to work at the, wheel (a Mr. Krete) was authorized so tc do, and whether his relations to the company were such as that notice to him of the defeot in the wheel was notice to the company; but we think his authority and relation were sufficiently shown, and there is no controversy but that plaintiff was injured, and by the flying fragments of an emery wheel at which he was working. The decisive thing is, was the wheel which burst defective as claimed, and was Mr. Krete’s attention so calle d to it? The plaintiff in error earnestly contends that, though the jury evidently so found,the great weight and force of the evidence indicates otherwise. And it is perhaps fair and proper that we state the testimony, facts and deductions that make for the support of the claims on each side on this issue.

The plaintiff testified that he went to work at the wheel on the right hand end of the shaft of the machine in question, about eleven o’clock in the morning of the 14th, and worked until noon, then quit for dinner and began again at ten minutes to one o’clock, and worked some hours till the wheel burst. He says that he did not use the face or periphery of the wheel, but ground on I he side of it, and did not notice or know of any defect in it, and that he had some expe ;i-enee with emery wheels off and on for four or five years, and was careful, and he says that he didn’t let any binder get únder the wheel and between' that and the iron table of the machine under the wheel. He says that the wheel that he worked on was thicker and smaller in diameter than the one exhibited to the jury, which was an inch thick and four inches in diameter.

The evidence of the defendant below tended to show, and the defendant claims the truth is, that the accident occurred [725]*725from the plaintiff’s allowing many of said binders to lie on the table of the machine, and that the slight jar of the machinery would move them about, and nothing prevented one. of them from coming in contact with the wheel, and that immediately after the accident it was noticed that a part of the wheel that burst still clung to the shaft and showed it.to be an inch wheel, and not one and one-half inches thick, and right under the place of the centre cf the wheel one of these binders was then sticking up, being lodged in the round draft hole through the table, and on the upper corner as it lay a place was gr'ound off as if by the wheel. This piece of iron, cr binder, was exhibited to the court, being attached to the bill of exceptions, and the machine itself, with a four-inch emery wheel, one inch thick, was also exhibited, and it was demonstrated that if such a piece should get into that position under the wheel, while in motion, it would inevitably tear the wheel in pieces or cause it to burst. Several witnesses testified to seeing those binders all over the table while plaintiff was at work, and to the fact that the wheel that burst was a fourteen-inch wheel, cne inch thick. The man who originally put it in new, a few days before,says he put this inch wheel on the left Bide and worked cn it there, ground on it the day before Santschi was hurt, and tl^at Hill that day changed it from the left to the right side, and that he and not Santschi was grinding on it up to the time that Hill changed it. And there was much testimony tending to show that Santschi was not.giinding on the machine cn the 13th, but was at work in the rubber room, and that Bar-chant was grinding on the 13th where Santschi claimed that he — Santschi—was. Mr. Hill, who was the man who changed the wheels, according to the testimony on both sides,says he did it so the large wheel could be on the right, as it was handier in grinding mud-guards, and that the fourteen-inch wheel was thus left cn the right hand side, and that he had the wheel in his hands and there was no defeat that he saw. There was no evidence tending to show that the fourteen-inch wheel was defective, but that persons ground tools on its face several time that day. Mr. Kerte denies that his attention was called to any defect in the wheel, but says that if it had been it would have been his duty to take it eff and not. suffer it to be run.

The testimony was conflicting as to whether such defeot in the wheel as testified to by Surtman and Hutchinson could have been seen while the wheel was running, but [726]*726several expert witnesses testified that such a piece being out of a wheel run at such speed as this ran — over 1,5Q0 revolutions per minute — it would throw the wheel out of balance and oause the whole machine to so shake and tremble that no one could avoid noticing it, and it could not be used. There was no testimony contradicting this (except the said testimony of the plaintiff that he did not notice any such thing, and that of Surtman and Hutchinson, that the piece was out). There was, at least, no claim cr proof but that the wheel ran apparently smooth and all right till it burst,, with no such jar or shaking of the machine.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio C.C. 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gendron-iron-wheel-co-v-santschi-ohcirctlucas-1896.