Indiana Steel & Wire Co. v. Studes

119 N.E. 2, 187 Ind. 469, 1918 Ind. LEXIS 55
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1918
DocketNo. 23,078
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 119 N.E. 2 (Indiana Steel & Wire Co. v. Studes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indiana Steel & Wire Co. v. Studes, 119 N.E. 2, 187 Ind. 469, 1918 Ind. LEXIS 55 (Ind. 1918).

Opinion

Townsend, J.

— Appellee, as employe .of appellant wire company, sustained a fracture of both bones of his right forearm while working in the wire company’s factory. Appellant The Fidelity and Casualty Company of New York, as insurer of the wire company, settled with appellee for $120. This action is against both appellants for fraud in the settlement. The verdict of the jury was for $7,500, less the settlement, and judgment was rendered against appellants for $7,380. The questions presented by motion for a new trial are as follows: (1) Verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence. (2) Verdict is contrary to law. (3) Errors in giving and refusing instructions. We shall consider the first two together.

So far as the negligence is concerned, the complaint is based on §3, Acts 1911 p. 145 (§8020a et seq. Burns 1914), and is the failure of the wire company to furnish'appellee a safe place to work.

The evidence shows, following the allegations of the complaint, that the wire company employed from 150 to 200 men; that in its factory there was a bench along the south wall of the room about two and one-half or three feet high and about the same width; that on this bench were vertical iron spools about twelve inches in diameter at the top and about sixteen inches in diameter at the bottom; that in the top of each spool were four holes which were fitted with iron pins about two feet long with hooks on top to prevent wire from flying off; that these spools were about one foot apart and about twelve or thirteen inches from the south wall of the building; that they were rotated rapidly by electrical power transmitted by a line shaft and gears under the bench; that each spool could be stopped by a foot pedal which projected through a sheet metal apron which ex[472]*472tended from the front edge of the bench to the floor; that from four to eight feet north of this bench on the floor were reels; that bundles of wire were thrown onto these reels and passed from them through dies, on the bench and around the spools; that the dies were to reduce the size of the wire; that there were two reels on the floor for each spool; that the operator in passing from one spool to another stepped over these strands of wire running from the reels to the dies and. the spools; that it was proper and necessary for the operator to wear gloves to prevent the burning of his hands in handling the wire while these spools and reels were running; that it was appellee’s duty to draw wire from these reels through these dies onto six of these spools; that in the south wall back of the east two or three spools was an opening about four feet square, the bottom of which was about one foot above the bench; that steam from the exhaust of an engine came through this opening and rain and moisture came in there; that this moisture interfered with drawing the wire; that the wire company’s carpenter was told to put a window in; that he put a window in this opening which pivoted in the center on each side life a transom; that this window pivoted in at the top and out at the bottom; that the window failed to fill the opening at the top and rain and moisture came in through this crack; that appellee called this to the attention of a carpenter in the shop and he promised to fix it; that thereafter appellee observed that it was fixed and thought no more about it; that this was thirty or forty days before this accident; that appellee on February 4, 1913, was operating these spools and, while untangling wire which, was going onto the east spool, had his back to the window and, feeling cold air strike him, turned around and observing a stick about to fall from this crack, as he thought, into the revolving spools, seized in his right hand an iron bar [473]*473about three feet long and pushed the stick into place; that in so doing his glove and then his shirt sleeve caught in one of the spools and wound his arm around the spool and drew his body up over the bench; that both bones of his right forearm were broken and crushed just above the wrist.

1. Appellants insist that this window and this stick have nothing to do with appellees’ working place. The function of a window when it is shut is to let in light and keep out other things. When it is open, to let in light and air. The moisture interfered with the drawing of the wire and that is the reason the window was put in. The moisture came through the crack above the sash and that is the reason the stick was put in. Here was a window four feet square pivoted on the sides like a transom. If opened, it turned in at the top and out at the bottom. A stick four feet long was placed above, nailed neither to the sash nor to the frame. This stick was about three feet above the top of these rapidly rotating spools and about one foot south of them. If this stick fell either from the jar of the machinery or action of the wind, or from the opening of the window, either purposely or accidentally, the most obvious and probable place for it to go was into one or two of these rotating spools which were vertical and had four iron pins in the top. This was plainly a part of the working place and also a dangerous part.

2. It is next insisted that, the fact that the stick had been there thirty or forty days, the appellee did not know how it got there or who put it there, other than that he had called the attention of a carpenter in the shop to the crack and this carpenter promised to fix it and appellee afterwards discovered that it was fixed and thought no more about it until he saw the stick about to fall the day of the accident, was not sufficient to shift the burden of proof.

[474]*4742. 3. There are a great many obscurities in the act of 1911, supra, and there is a great deal of loose and inapt language in this act; but there are at least two things in it about which reasonable minds could not well differ. One is that §1 abolishes the doctrine of fellow servant; and the other is that §3, among other things, shifts the burden of proof to the master to show that he did not know, and could not have known by the exercise of ordinary care, of the dangerous condition of the working place in time to have repaired or discontinued it. The jury had a right to infer from the evidence that the appellant wire company put the stick there and did not fasten it, or that it had an opportunity by ordinary care to know that it was there in time to have fastened it. If appellants did not want the jurors to draw this inference, they should have shown .them something to repel it. §3, Acts 1911 p. 145, supra.

Appellants next insist that there is not sufficient evidence from which the inference of fraud may be. drawn. The evidence shows that when appellee was hurt he was asked by the superintendent of the factory if he had a family doctor; that he said “no”; that the superintendent then told some one in the office to call a doctor, naming him; that this superintendent then took appellee in a cab to this doctor’s office; that this doctor with the assistance of another took care of the fracture; that this doctor continued to care for it from February 4, -1913, to August 25,1913; that about three or four weeks after the accident appellee told the doctor that the grocer was pressing him; that the doctor told appellee to go to the superintendent of the wire company and maybe something could be done; that appellee went and was told by the superintendent that the company had insurance and to go to the agent of the company; that appellee afterwards met the claim agent of the appellant insur[475]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 N.E. 2, 187 Ind. 469, 1918 Ind. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indiana-steel-wire-co-v-studes-ind-1918.