Jarboe's Administrator v. Coleman

182 S.W. 922, 168 Ky. 707, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 616
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 25, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 182 S.W. 922 (Jarboe's Administrator v. Coleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jarboe's Administrator v. Coleman, 182 S.W. 922, 168 Ky. 707, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 616 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle —

Affirming.

[708]*708Bruce Jarboe, a young man eighteen years of age, lacking' one day, lost Ms life in a spoke manufactory at Somerset, Ky., owned and operated by tbe appellees, J. S. Coleman and R. H. Coleman, as partners under tbe firm name “Columbia Single Tree Company.” At tbe time of bis death and for two months prior thereto tbe decedent was a factory band in appellees’ employ, engaged in operating a machine called an “equalizer.” While so engaged be became entangled in a belt and was burled against an overhead shaft or pulley and killed. This action was brought against the appellees by the administrator of his estate to recover damages for his death.

The cause of action alleged in the petition was that the death of the decedent was caused by the negligence of the appellees in allowing machinery and appliances at wMch he was required to work to be and remain in a defective and dangerous condition, which was known by them but was not known by the decedent. The first paragraph of appellee’s answer contains a traverse, the second a plea of contributory negligence, and the third assumption of risk; that is, that the death of the decedent resulted from an ordinary risk incident to the work which he assumed in accepting the employment. All affirmative matter of the answer was controverted by reply, thus completing the issues. The trial resulted in a verdict for the appellees, returned by the jury in obedience to a peremptory instruction from the court. Prom the judgment entered upon that verdict the administrator has appealed.

The machine the decedent was operating when killed was located in an open shed attached to the factory building proper, and was used to make uniform in length pieces of timber or sticks to be later converted into spokes. The machine was composed of two circular saws and a conveyor, the saws being placed opposite each other so that each, when in motion, would at the same time cut an end of the same stick. The conveyor carried the sticks to the saws and through and beyond them into the mill, where they were made into spokes. Each of the circular saws was driven by a leather belt which ran on a pulley attached to an overhead shaft, the shaft being kept in motion by a larger belt running from the factory engine within the building. The conveyor was operated by a canvas belt four inches wide which at its lower end ran upon a thirty-inch wooden pulley [709]*709attached to the machine on its left or north side, and at the upper end upon an iron pulley eight inches wide attached to the overhead line shaft. The canvas belt for operating the conveyor was what is known as a cross-belt; that is, the two sides of the belt were crossed halfway between the two pulleys. The line shaft revolved about four hundred times per minute.

The following facts were established by the appellant’s evidence and are undisputed: In operating the equalizer the operator was required to stand in front of it about two feet to the right of the conveyor belt, which was on the left side of the machine, and place upon the conveyor chain the pieces of timber which would be carried by the conveyor chain into and through the saws, thence into the mill to be turned into spokes. It was also the duty of the operator to keep his machine oiled, replace any belts that came off and to repair any belt that needed repairing; and when anything went wrong with the machine that he could not himself repair, to report the difficulty to the foreman, who would see that the repairs were made. It was no part of the foreman’s duty to inspect the machinery of the factory.

It further appears from the evidence that the decedent’s father, J. 0. Jarboe, who was appellees’ foreman in charge of the spoke factory, of his own accord and without direction or suggestion from appellees employed the decedent, Bruce Jarboe, to operate the equalizer and at the time of doing so fully explained to him how it should be operated, and that for two months prior to his death the machine was properly operated by the latter, who during that time received the wages of a regular- hand, namely, two dollars a day. It also appears from the evidence that about five minutes before his death Bruce Jarboe went to his father, appellees’ foreman, and obtained of him the key to a room in which extra belts were stored, to get material to repair a belt on his machine. The evidence is silent as to what Bruce Jarboe did after obtaining the key. It shows, however, that appellees’ employes near his place of work heard a noise and saw Bruce Jarboe being hurled around the overhead shaft. They Immediately ran to his assistance and upon reaching him found that his leg was inside the conveyor belt, which was off the lower pulley, and that this- belt and the leg of the decedent had become wrapped around the upper pulley attached to the line [710]*710shaft. The machinery was stopped as quickly as it could be done, the belt cut and the body of decedent was taken down.

The pulley on the line shaft around which the conveyor belt and the decedent’s leg were wrapped is called 'a split pulley, because composed of two semi-circular sections which, when joined together, fit around the line shaft. On one edge of the pulley, where the two sections joined, there was a triangular niche or hole in the face of the pulley, an inch in width, a part of which was in each section of the pulley. The edge of the belt had caught in this niche, which caused it to wind itself around the pulley. It could not be told from the appearance of the niche how long it had been in the pulley. It appears from the proof, however, that the line shaft pulley and another which was put in use in the supply room wei~e purchased by appellees about four months before the accident in question. The niche in the line' shaft pulley, according to the testimony of W. A. Cundiff:, one of appellees ’ witnesses, was made by the decedent, Bruce Jarboe, about a week before the accident. Cundiff was then assisting Jarboe in putting on the conveyor belt on the latter’s machine, Cundiff being at the wooden pulley near the ground and Jarboe at the metal pulley on the line shaft. Failing in their first attempt to put on the canvas belt, the decedent in a fit of anger or from some other unjustifiable cause, took a black-jack spoke and struck the pulley a blow that broke a piece of the metal from the face of it, thereby making the niche therein. Powell, another witness for appellees, passed Cundiff and the decedent while they were attempting to put on the belt and saw the latter break the pulley and heard Cundiff tell him: “You had better-have it fixed; it is liable to fray the life out of you.” Powell then told the decedent that there was. a new pulley upstairs which ho ought to have-put on, to which the latter replied that he would some day when they were shut down. George Hargis, another employe of appellees, testified that in passing where the decedent, Cundiff and Powell were at the time of the conversation referred to, he heard the warning that Cundiff gave decedent with respect to the niche which the latter had made in the pulley. Cundiff, who gave the decedent the warning,' was not the superior but merely a fellow servant of the decedent in appellees’ service. He operated a turning machine just [711]*711inside the factory, about twelve foet from the decedent’s machine and within full view of .same. There was no evidence conducing to prove that J. 0. Jarboe, appellees’ foreman, was ever informed of or knew' anything about the existence of the niche in the pulley at his son’s machine.

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Related

Crook v. Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Railway Co.
209 S.W. 859 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.W. 922, 168 Ky. 707, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jarboes-administrator-v-coleman-kyctapp-1916.