Heffner v. Sprague Electric Co.

177 F. 897, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4427
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 15, 1910
DocketNo. 47 (1,348)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 177 F. 897 (Heffner v. Sprague Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heffner v. Sprague Electric Co., 177 F. 897, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4427 (3d Cir. 1910).

Opinion

CROSS, District Judge.

The Sprague Electric Company, the defendant in error, on November 4, 1907, was engaged in the manufacture of electrical hoists, motors, and generators at its factory in Bloomfield, N. J. On that date an accident happened whereby the plaintiff in error, one of its employes, was injured, and for the injury thus received he instituted a suit in the court below to recover compensatory damages. Fie had entered the employment of the defendant on the seventh day of the previous month as a tester of electric hoists. He also did some other work about the factory, to which reference will be made later.- The defendant had erected and was using in its business at that time an elevated track, supported on two I beams running lengthwise of its shop. Upon this track ran a carriage, which supported a hoisting apparatus, equipped with a brake, which was electrically operated by an operator, who was stationed in a cage under the carriage and between the rails over which it ran. The accident happened to the plaintiff on Monday, November 4th. On the previous Saturday, he with one or two others had been sent to repair and test the brake of the carriage or to put on a new brake. He was engaged on the work during Saturday and Sunday, and on Monday, the job having been almost completed, he returned for the purpose of finally testing the brake. While the repairs were being made, the [899]*899electric current had been turned off, but it was on again on Monday morning. On that morning a man by the name of Marlow accompanied the plaintiff, and at the time of the accident was in the cage. After the brake had been tested and adjusted, the plaintiff picked up his tools with his right hand, and walked across the I beam from the carriage to an iron ladder reaching from the gallery floor below to, and resting against, the flange of the I beam. The carriage at the time was but six feet distant from the ladder. In climbing down the ladder backwards, the plaintiff with his left hand took hold of the rail on the top of the I beam nearest him, and, while his hand grasped the rail, the carriage was started towards the ladder by Mar-low, and in its progress ran over and crushed the fingers of his hand, so that it subsequently became necessary to amputate them. The plaintiff admits that he knew the use of the rail; that the hoisting-apparatus was electrically operated; that the current of electricity which operated it had been turned on; and that Marlow, the man who operated the carriage supporting the hoisting apparatus, was in the cage from which it was operated, and was ready to operate it. He also practically admitted that he told Marlow that he had completed the work. This is his language: “I probably said (to Marlow) I was through; it seems to me 1 did.” The learned trial judge directed a judgment of nonsuit to be entered, and it is for the purpose of reviewing such judgment that this writ of error was brought. The judgment was directed on the ground that the proximate cause of the injury was the negligent act of Marlow, who was a fellow servant of the plaintiff. As soon as the court had indicated that a nonsuit must be entered for the reason stated, counsel for the plaintiff raised the point that the plaintiff when injured was engaged in work outside the scope of his employment. The judge, however, held that the facts did not warrant sttch a conclusion, and adhered to his original ruling.

Notwithstanding the unfortunate accident, with its resultant injury to the plaintiff, we are impelled to the conclusion that a nonsuit was properly ordered. It plainly appears from the facts that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. He had been engaged in work at the scene of the accident for parts, at least, of three days, and his usual place of work was on the gallery floor at the foot of the ladder, and only about 20 or 30 feet away from the point where he was injured. He had therefore necessarily become familiar with his surroundings, and knew, as already intimated, the use of the rail on which his hand rested when it was injured; knew that an electrically operated carriage, then standing but 6 feet away, was accustomed to pass over it; knew that the electric current had been turned on, and that Marlow, who operated the carriage, was in the cage whence it was operated, and ready at any moment to start the carriage, having probably been told by the plaintiff that he had completed his work. Under the circumstances, common prudence required either that the plaintiff himself should have notified Marlow not to start the carriage, or that he should have refrained from placing his hand upon the rail. The case of Ball v. Ransome Machinery Co., 75 N. J. Raw, 477, 68 Atl. 104, seems peculiarly apposite. The facts sufficiently appear in the opinion of the court, from which the following extract is taken:

[900]*900■“The building contained a traveling crane, used for tbe purpose of moving heavy machinery. It ran upon wheels upon iron rails, supported by beams, near the roof. Plaintiff was familiar with the operation of the crane by observation, and by seeing it move during the short time that he had been employed on the building. At the time he was injured he was working upon a scaffold, and was aiding others in placing joists on the unfinished side of the building, upon which the covering of the side was to be placed. Having to nail the top of a joist at a point which, it may be assumed, he was unable to reach while standing on the scaffold, he, without raising the scaffold, or using other means to raise himself so as to perforin the work without danger, stepped upon a studding above the scaffold, and there, it may be assumed, occupied a position that required him to support himself, to some extent, at least, with his left hand. In doing so he placed that hand on the top of the rail, and, the traveling crane then moving, his hand was caught under one of the wheels and injured. There was no signal given of the intention to move the crane. Upon this evidence the trial judge determined that the plaintiff showed that he had, by his conduct, subjected himself to a risk of injury which was perfectly obvious, and which he could not thus encounter without negligence. In that conclusion we concur. It is impossible to conceive that plaintiff did not know that the rail was a place of danger for him to put his hand upon. Nor was there anything to justify him in thinking that the crane would not move without notice, which might have presented a question for the jury.”

The same conclusion follows, however, if we accept the view of the court below to the effect that the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury was the negligence of Marlow, who was unquestionably a fellow servant of the plaintiff. They were both at the time of the accident, and had been previously, engaged in a common employment, under a common master. Marlow, knowing that the plaintiff had completed his work and was about to descend the ladder, ought not, as a prudent man, to have started the carriage without warning, or until he knew that the plaintiff was in a safe position. The facts above mentioned were practically undisputed, and the judge, in determining them as he did, and in directing a judgment of nonsuit, committed no error.

It is strenuously insisted, however, that at the time the plaintiff received his injury he was engaged in work he had been directed to perform outside of the scope of his employment. In our judgment, however, .the work in which the plaintiff was engaged when injured was not outside of the scope of his employment. ITis general employment was to test hoists and hoisting apparatus, electrically operated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 F. 897, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heffner-v-sprague-electric-co-ca3-1910.