Hartigan v. Deerfield Lumber Co.

81 A. 259, 85 Vt. 133, 1911 Vt. LEXIS 219
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 9, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 81 A. 259 (Hartigan v. Deerfield Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartigan v. Deerfield Lumber Co., 81 A. 259, 85 Vt. 133, 1911 Vt. LEXIS 219 (Vt. 1911).

Opinion

Watson, J.

At the close of the evidence the defendant moved for a verdict on different grounds stated, among which were, that upon the whole evidence the plaintiff cannot recover, and that from the evidence he was guilty of contributing negligence, in that with the situation plainly before him he stumbled over a board or piece of lumber and fell against the machine,— the stumbling or falling being an act of negligence which due care would have prevented. To the denial of the motion an exception was saved. Treating the defendant’s negligence shown by the evidence as a proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury as he claims, we pass to the consideration of the question of negligence by him contributing thereto. The facts hereinafter stated either appeared on the trial, or are in accordance with the evidence viewed in its most favorable light to the plaintiff.

At the time of his injury, September 11,1907, at 7:30 A. M., the plaintiff, a man of mature years, as an employee of the defendant, was operating a planing machine in the defendant’s mill in Wilmington, this State. He had then been in the defendant’s employ about eight months, taking lumber away from the planer in question between two and three months at first, and the rest of the time running the machine. The machine was located in the southeast corner of the mill, its front end toward the north. Near that end were feed rolls between which lumber was fed to the planer, and by which it was carried [135]*135on between the cylinders and the knives some three feet or more further back. The position of the operator was in front of the machine and facing the feedrolls. Three levers were used in connection with this machine: a big lever four or five feet at the right and back of the operator’s position, called the “shipper” or “shifter”, used for the purpose of starting or stopping the entire machine; one at the left of the machine, used to set the bed for planing lumber to the desired thickness; and one also at the left, used to start or stop the feed rolls by shifting the belt from the loose pulley to the tight pulley, or in the converse manner, as might be required. By some of the witnesses this last named lever was called the “feed lever”, and for convenience we • hereinafter refer to it by that name. The alleged negligence of the defendant upon which the plaintiff relies as the proximate cause of his injury pertains particularly to this lever.

The resaw was northwest of the planer: from fifteen to twenty feet "further north, and its table extending southerly to within three or four feet of the planer. Usually the boards to be run through this planer came from the resaw, but sometimes they were brought on hand-trucks from elsewhere. When the resaw was running it was necessary to have a man to take the boards off the table and put them on the floor between that machine and the planer in question, from which place they were taken by the operator of the planer to feed to that machine. Witnesses estimated that about 10,000 feet of boards a day on an average thus came from the resaw to the planer, and some said that when both machines were in operation lumber came from the resaw faster than it could be put through the planer, though generally the resaw was not in operation constantly, and the lumber from it could be run through the planer in the course of the day; while others said the lumber could be run through the planer about as fast as it came from the resaw.

A railroad ran past the mill on the east. On the morning of the accident the plaintiff was told by the foreman of the mill to commence planing dry lumber which came from the yard on a railroad car. Later, but before beginning work, the plaintiff asked the foreman, “What shall I do with the boards coming [136]*136from the resaw?” to which the latter answered, “Never mind. -I will take care of them.”

To be planed the dry lumber was taken from the car on a hand truck run up to about three feet of the planer, and lengthwise of it. The mill started at six o’clock, and was run to its full and usual capacity to the time of the accident. During that time the boards coming from the resaw were being piled on the floor between that machine and the planer, the usual place of putting them to be planed.

After the mill had been running about one and one-fourth hours the pipe in the blower of the planer became clogged with shavings, as it sometimes did, and it was necessary for the plaintiff, in the performance of his duties, to go into the basement of the mill to clean out the pipe. In so doing he turned directly to his left, going northerly from the planer a short distance, then turning to the right around the truck and the pile of lumber on it from which he was planing, thence southerly east of the truck into the basement. In about ten or twelve minutes he returned over the same course, and when going from the north to the place where he ordinarily stood when operating the planer he tripped his foot on a board which had slipped off the pile •of lumber accumulating from the resaw, or projecting from the bottom of it, across his path about two inches above the floor, three or four feet from the planer, and “was thrown headlong,” his right hand being caught between the revolving feedrolls of the machine. After his hand was thus caught so that he could not pull it out, he shouted for help and at the same time grabbed the feed lever with his left hand and pulled it toward him, to shift the belt iron the tight pulley to the loose one, and so stop the rolls. The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that this was moving the lever in the right direction to effect that result, but that the condition of the lever and its attachments was then such that the belt was not shifted by so changing the position of the lever, and the rolls were not stopped till another employee in the mill, who came to the plaintiff’s rescue, kicked off the belt by which they were driven. The plaintiff did not know the board was thus in his path before he tripped on it. When the plaintiff was planing the lumber taken from the truck his back was towards the resaw, and to get the boards from [137]*137‘¿he truck he turned to the left. No one saw the plaintiff when he tripped and fell against the machine. He testified that he did not see the pile of lumber from the resaw before his injury; that when he first started his planer that morning the operator of the resaw started that, and he supposed it was running; that he knew there was usually a man at the lower end of the resaw table to take boards away, and supposed a man was there then for that purpose. He then testified: “Q. What did you suppose he was doing with them? A. I didn’t suppose he was doing anything; that was not my business. Q. There was nothing he could be doing only piling them on the floor, was there? A. Not if he was told to pile them there; all I went by was what the boss told me — he would take care of them. Q. Didn’t you suppose the boards were coming through the resaw and being piled there? A. Yes, naturally. Q. And when the resaw was working right along it was making considerably fast? A. Always did. Q. And didn’t you know that at times boards would not all be in line in that pile? A. They would be in line if properly piled.”

The plaintiff further testified that the lumber from the resaw on that morning was not piled, but “was thrown off the table and went wherever it had a mind to”; and that while he worked for the company there was no occasion when the lumber was allowed to accumulate about the planer in the manner it did the morning of the injury. He testified in cross examination: “Q. You say lumber was all scattered about instead of being piled up? A. Yes. Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 A. 259, 85 Vt. 133, 1911 Vt. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartigan-v-deerfield-lumber-co-vt-1911.