Jablonowski v. Modern Cap Manufacturing Co.

279 S.W. 89, 312 Mo. 173, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 841
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 30, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 279 S.W. 89 (Jablonowski v. Modern Cap Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jablonowski v. Modern Cap Manufacturing Co., 279 S.W. 89, 312 Mo. 173, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 841 (Mo. 1925).

Opinion

*179 RAGLAND, J.

This case was first heard in Division One and an opinion prepared by one of our Commissioners. His statement of the facts and such of his conclusions of law as met with the concurrence of the majority of the Court en Banc follow:

“Action to recover damages for alleged personal injuries. Respondent, on August 6, 1919, the date of her' alleged injury, was an employee of appellant in its cap factory in St. Louis. She was employed as a ‘cap-sizer,’ her work being to sew the right sizes in the caps. This Avork was done on a sewing machine, placed with other seAving machines on top of a work table at which fourteen girl operators worked, seven on each side of the table. *180 There were four of these tables in the factory, two tables on each side of a center or main aisle and passageway, some five or six feet wide. Working about these tables in the factory were some forty people, both girls and men, but the machine operators were girls. The sewing machines were operated automatically by means of electric motors connected with the sewing machines by power rods and belts. The power rods ran beneath the tables about ten to twelve inches above the floor. The operators sat upon chairs on both sides of the tables directly in front of the sewing machines. In order to prevent the skirts or clothing of the operators from becoming entangled in the power rods and belting, skirt or shield boards were placed lengthwise on both .sides of the tables, the ends of the shield boards fitting or slipping into slots or grooves molded in the iron standards of the tables to keep the boards in position. The shield boards, when in place, were at the feet of the operators and the lower edges some six or eight inches above the floor. They were approximately the same length as the tables. On the opposite side of the floor of the factory from that occupied by the sewing machine tables was a trimming room, denominated by the employees as the ‘cage.’ When the operators finished their work, they-carried the caps in large bundles from the machines to the ‘cage,’ where they were left and a new allotment of material to be worked upon was obtained from the person in charge o'f the ‘cage.’- Respondent worked at or near the south end of a table in the southwest corner of the floor. She completed the work assigned to her a few minutes before noon of the day in question and started to carry her finished work, about fifteen or eighteen dozen caps, weighing between twenty and twenty-five pounds, in her arms to the ‘cage,’ or finishing room, on the opposite side of the floor. Respondent testified that she walked around the south end of the table to the main or center aisle, and as she reached a point in the aisle about opposite her machine and immediately behind the chair of the operator directly across the table from her, she tripped on a shield board lying across the center of *181 the main aisle, and fell, striking her right knee on the edge of the hoard and her right hand upon the floor. She was assisted to her feet by another girl operator and, becoming nauseated, went to the rest room, where she examined her knee and found it to be red and ‘the skin was all rubbed.’ After lunch, she attempted to resume work, but, after working twenty minutes, her knee became painful and started to swell, causing her to leave her work and return home. Eespondent had been in appellant’s employ for about six months. She testified that it was customary for her and the other operators to use the main aisle in carrying their completed work to the finishing room; that the bundle of caps which she was carrying at the time extended from her waist-line as high as her chin, so that she could not see the shield board and did not know it was lying across the aisle at the time; that ‘this board came from underneath the machine on the east side. The board was underneath the first machine from the Washington Avenue side. I seen Mr. Novoson (president and manager of appellant corporation) at that machine quite often,, but I seen him the night before I fell. He' was fixing the motor on the back there, on the left side. The motor was on the Washington Avenue side, on the south side. I did not see Mr. Novoson do anything with this board at any time, only when he was fixing the motor he had to take it out. It was quitting time, 5 -.30, the night before; my attention was attracted to him because the motor during the day was sparkling and it was making noise. I was going home. I just says, “Good night” to Mr. Novoson. I saw the board that night; it was either behind or alongside. I couldn’t exactly tell you. His feet were out in the aisle. His head "and hands were underneath the machine, underneath the table, and I saw the board in about where ■his feet were, somewhere along there. This accident happened a quarter to twelve the next day. I did not use that aisle that day before I was hurt. I used the west aisle, that is, the aisle up ¿long the Tenth Street side. Before that, I had seen the board out of this machine either three weeks before or two weeks before I fell. *182 It was in the same aisle, in the main aisle; about twice a week or three times a week he had to fix it.’
“Respondent claims to have gone to the office of her physician for treatment of her knee every day or every other day for a period of about two weeks after the date of her injury, walking to his office and back home. The doctor’s office was about a block, or perhaps two blocks, from her home. Thereafter her physician called at her home, where she was confined for a period of four or five weeks. On October 14, 1919, an X-ray photograph of her knee was taken, after which her knee was bandaged ánd bound with adhesive tape for a considerable period of time and she was still under the care and treatment of her physician at the time of the trial in November, 1920. Respondent complained of nervousness, insomnia, loss of appetite and pain in and about her knee and walked with the aid of a cane. Another .X-ray photograph was taken on April 20, 1920.
“Two girl operators employed in the factory testified to having seen a shield board lying across the main aisle at times previous to the day of respondent’s alleged injury. Another operator, Beatrice Hart, testified that she was sitting at her machine at the time respondent fell; she didn’t see, but heard, her fall, and witness turned around in her chair and respondent was on the floor back of witness’s chair; the shield board was lying in the aisle back of the chair. She testified: ‘I noticed the shield board; it didn’t fit in there; the table sat on some iron legs and on those legs they had little slot places where the shield board was supposed to fit in, but the shield board was a little too short, and it didn’t fit them; it always hung on this end, and the other end was always on the floor. It was always on the floor; it never fit in there. The shield board was lying in the aisle. It would fall out of there and get into the aisle. I noticed it several times in the aisle, but not every day I didn’t see it there, but a number of times. It was lying around on the floor for two or three weeks before the plaintiff fell, before the accident, out in the aisle and under the machine. ... I came in contact with one *183

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Richter v. Kirkwood
111 S.W.3d 504 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2003)
Brown v. Hamid
856 S.W.2d 51 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1993)
State v. Atkinson
835 S.W.2d 517 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1992)
Callaway ex rel. Callway v. Lilly
605 S.W.2d 155 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1980)
Galovich v. Hertz Corporation
513 S.W.2d 325 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1974)
Paulsen v. Butcher
492 S.W.2d 186 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1973)
Tietjens v. General Motors Corporation
418 S.W.2d 75 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1967)
Triplett v. St. Louis Public Service Co.
372 S.W.2d 515 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1963)
Beckett v. Kiepe
369 S.W.2d 258 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1963)
Turner v. Caldwell
349 S.W.2d 493 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1961)
Leavitt v. St. Louis Public Service Company
340 S.W.2d 131 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1960)
Houfburg v. Kansas City Stock Yards Co. of Maine
283 S.W.2d 539 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1955)
Johnston v. Owings
254 S.W.2d 993 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1952)
Aguilera v. Reynolds Well Service, Inc.
234 S.W.2d 282 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1950)
Conner v. Neiswender
232 S.W.2d 469 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1950)
Crampton v. Osborn
201 S.W.2d 336 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1947)
Waters v. Crites
166 S.W.2d 496 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1942)
State Ex Rel. Tramill v. Shain
161 S.W.2d 974 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1942)
Theurer v. Holland Furnace Co.
124 F.2d 494 (Tenth Circuit, 1941)
Tramill v. Prater
152 S.W.2d 684 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
279 S.W. 89, 312 Mo. 173, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jablonowski-v-modern-cap-manufacturing-co-mo-1925.