Glassbrook v. Lansing Wheelbarrow Co.

142 N.W. 1105, 177 Mich. 29, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 685
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1913
DocketDocket No. 21
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 142 N.W. 1105 (Glassbrook v. Lansing Wheelbarrow Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glassbrook v. Lansing Wheelbarrow Co., 142 N.W. 1105, 177 Mich. 29, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 685 (Mich. 1913).

Opinions

Steers, C. J.

This case comes here by writ of error to review a verdict and judgment obtained by plaintiff on a second trial, in the circuit court for the county of Ingham, wherein he was awarded $6,500 damages for permanent injuries to his right forearm; that member having been drawn between a belt which he was adjusting and its pulley.

Defendant is a manufacturing corporation organized under the laws of the State of Michigan; its business being the manufacture of wheelbarrows, trucks, and various other articles, for which purpose it owned and operated an extensive plant in the city of Lansing, Mich., equipped with power and machinery. As part of its outfit it operated a foundry, woodwork shop, steam boilers, engines, machines, shafts, belts,' pulleys, and appliances, and used steam and electricity as motive power. In connection with its foundry it had and used a rattling room 8x20 feet in size, in which were located .two rattlers, separated by a board partition runhing north and south, which divided the space about equally between the two.

A “rattler” is a mechanical device of about one ton weight, driven by power; its object being to smooth and free metal castings from adhering molding sand. This is 'accomplished by putting the rough castings into a cylinder about 2% feet in diameter and 6 or 8 feet in length, formed of heavy metal slats or staves, fastened at the ends to flat circular metal heads, and revolving the same rapidly. Plaintiff, when injured, was in defendant’s employ, operating said rattlers.

Plaintiff was 40 years of age at the time of his injury and had been intermittently in the employ of defendant and its predecessors in the same business for about six years, during which time he did various kinds of work, süch as putting up scrapers and working on different kinds of trucks, wheelbarrows, and spring tooth harrows, also operating at different times both a punch press and a drill press. After [32]*32six years of such work he spent some two years on his own farm, returning to the wheelbarrow company in October, 1908. He was put at work on the “rattlers” in question, at which employment he continued until his injury on January 6, 1909.

To the outer side of each metal head of these rattlers was firmly attached a short metal shaft, or axle, one foot in length; said axle passing through wooden boxes which supported the rattler in a horizontal position three feet above the ground, there being no other floor. The two rattlers were set in a row lengthwise, practically east and west in the rattling room. One axle attached to each rattler was connected by a pinion wheel to a countershaft at the south side of and a little behind each. Both counter-shafts were provided with a tight pulley and connected by a 9-inch leather belt with a corresponding tight pulley on a line shaft which passed through the rattling room in an easterly and westerly direction, and were, supported by boxing at a height of 8 feet above the ground, a little to the north and 8 or 9 feet from the countershaft. The pulley on the line shaft and the belt connecting the same with the counter-shaft were above and in close proximity to the pinion wheels. The line shaft which operated the rattlers was propelled by an electric motor in the cupola room, close to the wall separating that room from the rattling room; the motor was stopped and started by a rheostat upon which was a little lever, pushed from one notch to another in applying or taking off the power. The line shaft, as a rule, ran continuously, and the rattlers were stopped and started from time to time as they were loaded and unloaded; it only taking about an hour to put through a charge of castings. The rattlers only ran when connected to the line shaft by the belting referred to, and this was put on and off as occasion demanded. The belting could be, and generally was, put upon the pulley while the [33]*33line shaft was in motion. In order to reach and make this connection, whether the shaft was in motion or not, it was necessary to climb up from the floor upon something, and a heavy oak kerosene barrel was kept on hand for that purpose, which always stood in such a position underneath the shaft that a man standing upon it could with his hands put the belt upon the pulley. It was while doing this that plaintiff was injured. His duties as an operator of the rattler consisted largely in filling and emptying the same; about a ton of new castings being put into the rattler at a time, shut in by a wooden cover to prevent spilling when in motion. It was necessary for the rattler to be stopped while being loaded, and each time it was started the belt had to be adjusted to the pulley on the line shaft.

Plaintiff’s declaration, consisting of two counts, charges defendant with negligence in failing to provide loose pulleys for the shafts and countershafts operating the rattler, and in not providing the gearing with proper safeguards, as required by statute; in providing an old, spliced belt with wire lacing which at times formed hooks, as it became worn and broken, which were liable to catch the hands or clothing; that the wooden boxings of the axle of the rattler, to which was attached the pinion wheel connecting the rattler with the countershaft, had been allowed to become worn or loose and the axle or shaft to settle, so that plaintiff was required to greatly exert his strength in putting the belt on the pulley; in not providing plaintiff with a safe place in which to perform his work, nor proper and suitable tools and appliances, furnishing him only a barrel to stand upon when putting the belt on the pulley, which was rendered more difficult by reason of sagging of the shaft, the barrel being unstable and liable to tip over and throw the plaintiff into the gearing. It is also alleged that [34]*34plaintiff complained of the machinery being out of repair, and the place unsafe, to defendant’s superintendent, who promised to remedy the same but failed to do so before plaintiff was injured; that while plaintiff, in the performance of his duties, was standing upon the barrel endeavoring to place the belt upon the tight pulley on the line shaft while the same was ^ running, as he had been instructed to do, the wire hooks formed by the broken splicing caught the mitten upon his right hand, it being necessary to wear mittens owing to the weather being extremely cold, and, in jerking away to free his hand and avoid being thrown upon the pinion wheels, the barrel tipped, causing him to fall in such manner that his right forearm was drawn between the belt and pulley and crushed. Defendant pleaded the general issue.

The errors alleged and relied on, and the propositions contended for by defendant in its brief, are, generally stated, that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, and the court erred in not directing a verdict for defendant under the undisputed facts; that there is a fatal variance between material allegations in the declaration and plaintiff’s own testimony; that various statements were made and language was used by counsel for plaintiff in their argument which amounted to prejudicial and reversible error; that the court erroneously refused certain of defendant’s requests and erroneously gave certain instructions as to contributory negligence and the rules by which the jury should be governed in weighing evidence.

The rattlers were old and had been in use for many years. That safeguards were not provided for the gearings, nor loose pulleys for the shafting, to throw the power on and off, is not disputed.

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Bluebook (online)
142 N.W. 1105, 177 Mich. 29, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glassbrook-v-lansing-wheelbarrow-co-mich-1913.