Hunt v. Dexter Sulphite Pulp & Paper Co.

100 A.D. 119, 91 N.Y.S. 279
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 100 A.D. 119 (Hunt v. Dexter Sulphite Pulp & Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunt v. Dexter Sulphite Pulp & Paper Co., 100 A.D. 119, 91 N.Y.S. 279 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Williams, J.:

The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.

The action was to recover damages for the death of plaintiffs Intestate, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant. The death resulted from the explosion of a digester in the defendant’s mill in the early morning of Sunday, January 18, 1903. The questions raised by this appeal relate to the defendant’s alleged negligence, the contributory negligence of deceased, his assumption of the risk of the accident, the amount of the verdict, and the exceptions to evidence and to the charge of the court. The only question of negligence on the part of the defendant submitted to the jury related to alleged defects in the digester, and it was necessary that the proof should show the existence of such defects, that the defendant knew" or should have known of them prior to the accident, and failed to repair them. The verdict of the jury involved a finding of these facts, and the question is whether there was evidence to support such finding. The digester was forty-two feet long and fourteen feet in diameter. It was composed of a steel shell seven-eighths .of an inch thick with a thin inside lining of litharge or sheetlead. Next to this lead, inside, was a coating of cement about two inches thick, and inside this cement were two courses of brick, the one next the cement laid flat and the other edgewise, and all was cemented inside the shell, making a complete arch twelve or thirteen inches thick. The digester was placed horizontally in the mill and had manholes in the top to receive the material, and manholes in the bottom to remove the product manufactured. The method of using the digester was to put in some water and turn the steam into the coils of lead pipe inside the digester so as to heat the water gradually up to boiling for twenty-four [121]*121hours, and thus warm, the digester and equalize the expansion of the steel shell and brick lining. This water was then all drawn off and the wood chips put in the digester and steam turned on, subjecting them to a process of slow steaming at low pressure. Then a solution of sulphurous acid and limestone was turned in upon the chips, filling the digester to within about two feet of the top and leaving that space as a chamber for the escaping gas to collect. The steam was then turned on, and the acid heated and cooked until the chips were reduced to a pulpy mass. The whole process took from forty-five to seventy-five hours. The explosion took place during the cooking process above referred to. During this process there was usually forty to forty-five pounds pressure from the inside o'f the digester outwards. This was a safe pressure and at the time of the accident the pressure was not above these figures as indicated by the gouge thereon. There seems to bé no evidence contained in the record as to what this pressure was caused by, whether loose steam in the digester or the gases in the chamber above the cooking material and the heat in the digester and materials. There were coils of steam pipe on the inside of the digester, and in order to heat the water first put in the digester the steam was turned through these coils. After the chips were put into the digester the steam seems to have been thrown directly upon the chips, but after the acid was turned upon the chips, whether the steam was turned through the coils of pipes or loosely upon the materials being cooked, the evidence fails to show. This may have been made clear in some way upon the trial to the court and jury, but the record here fails to throw any light upon the subject. If the steam being used in the digester at the time of the explosion was confined within the coils of pipe, it is not apparent how any steam pressure could have contributed to the explosion unless the coils of pipes also exploded, and of this there is no evidence. Eliminating the steam pressure from the causes for the explosion, we have left the gases in the chamber above the cooking material, and the heat in the body of the digester and • materials. There is no evidence in the record as to the pressure that would be caused by these gases and this heat. We are only informed by the evidence that there was a pressure of about forty-two pounds just before the explosion occurred. And then it appears the steel shell did give way, and am explosion took place which [122]*122wrecked the building, and displaced the other digesters in the same room. This explosion was, of course,, the result of some pressure from the inside, and it is claimed that no explosion would have occurred if the steel shell had not been defective. No high pressure was indicated by the gouge and there is no suggestion that the gouge did not operate correctly and properly measure the pressure actually operating from within against the shell of the digester. Evidence was given tending to show that the digester was seventeen years old.and that it had been patched several times, the patches running along the top nearly ■ its entire length; that these patches were fastened to the shell by cap screws and no .rivets were used as usual in such cases; that the object of the lining to the shell was to keep the acid from the steel; that the lining had been allowed to get out of repair from time to time so that the acid had penetrated to the Shell, and the fluid and gas had oozed out around the screws, cutting. off the threads and so making the shell along the top where the patches were located, weak, and that the shell was eaten and weakened by the contact of the acid, and that the shell broke at the time .of the explosion along the top where the patches were. There Was evidence tending to show that the officers and agents of defendant, whose duty it was to keep the digester in repair, had knowledge of its unsafe condition before the explosion, and neglected properly to repair it and put it in a safe condition. There was evidence given on the part of the defendant tending to show the digester was not in an unsafe condition to the knowledge of or with notice to the" defendant; that its defects, whenever they developed, Were repaired at once; that reasonable care and inspection were exercised, and all possible precaution taken to avoid any accident in the use of the digester, and that the defects that caused the accident were not discoverable by the exercise of any reasonable precautions. All this evidence made the question of defendant’s negligence one of fact for the jury. If a digester in proper order would resist a pressure of forty-five.pounds, and. this one exploded by reason of a pressure of only forty-two pounds, it must necessarily have been in a defective condition.

We cannot say that the verdict rendered was,, as to this issue, contrary to or against the weight of the evidence. It could not certainly be said, as a matter of law, that there was no negligence.

[123]*123The questions of assumed risk and contributory negligence in this case rest alike upon the proposition that the deceased knew or should have known of the defective condition of the digester, and nevertheless continued tó work about the same (except that as to contributory negligence it is said he failed to relieve the pressure upon the digester when his attention ivas called to conditions requiring such relief). He ivas not bound, as matter of law, to know all that the defendant was required to know about the safety of the digester. The defendant was charged with the duty of inspection. The deceased ivas not. No one supposed there was danger of an explosion.

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Bluebook (online)
100 A.D. 119, 91 N.Y.S. 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-dexter-sulphite-pulp-paper-co-nyappdiv-1905.