Jeez v. A. Y. McDonald Manufacturing Co.

179 Iowa 193
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 22, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 179 Iowa 193 (Jeez v. A. Y. McDonald Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeez v. A. Y. McDonald Manufacturing Co., 179 Iowa 193 (iowa 1917).

Opinion

Deemer, J.

1. Master and Servant : negligence of master : contributory negligence : jury questions. I. Defendant, as a part of his manufacturing business, maintained a brass foundry, which consisted of something like twenty melting pots made of graphite, each having its own furnace, and so constructed that1 they were operated independently of each other. The pots were so constructed that the tops were from C to 12 inches beloAV the floor of the shop, and each rested upon a bed of coals, and coal was also packed around them. A heavy iron lid was placed over them, when melt[195]*195ing was being done. The furnaces proper were some distance beneath the floor, and they were fed from the top. Ashes were removed through an opening in the floor, and this opening was usually covered with an iron grating. In front of. these, the brass to be melted was piled, and this usually consisted of scraps, which had to be sorted and placed in different piles before the furnaces. Usually, some brass borings were put into the pots early in the day, with heavier metal on top, and fresh supplies of this heavier material were added, from time to time, as the material already in assumed a molten form. The brass used came from different departments, as waste and cuttings from finishing and cutting machines, and foreign scrap or junk coming in from the outside. All this was sorted into three grades, known as red, yellow, and steam metal. There was also a difference in the method of treatment of local stuff— that is, matter coming from the factory proper — and that from the outside, in the form of junk received from peddlers and all outside sources. Again, the factory material was also sorted with reference to its size and character. The outside material came in boxes, barrels, etc., and was in the form of plumbers’ scrap metal, and all sorts and sizes of waste brass of every description. This foreign metal was generally known as red, and all of it was sorted, the red-placed in one pile, the yellow in another, and tlie steam in another, and the various kinds were placed in front of the furnaces, or melting pots, in boxes or on the floor. From these piles, it was shoveled or placed by hand in the pots. At the time of the accident, Avhieh occurred on November 2d, 1012, the material to be used in the furnaces came from the outside. It was mostly red, and Avas placed in a conical pile, about 2 feet high and 3 feet across. One Maine was the foundry foreman, and Steelier was (he head melter; plaintiff and others were what are knoAvn as helpers. When Maine was present, plaintiff and the other [196]*196helpers took their orders directly from him (Maine). When he was not present, Steelier was in control. The foreman did the sorting of the metal, and he performed the duty on the day of the accident; and he also gave directions to all as to what to do. In sorting, Maine looked over the material carefully, to guard against having any iron go into the furnace, and also separated the different kinds of brass according to ilieir character. Plaintiff had nothing to do with the sorting of brass, save as he might infrequently be called upon to assist. His duties were to look after the pots, to see that none of them became broken, to keep up the fire, and to feed the pots from the piles of brass which had been sorted and placed near the furnaces for melting.

On the morning in question, a lot of scrap brass came into the foundry in barrels, and Maine sorted about 1,000 pounds, early in the day. Most of this consisted of what is known as red brass, and, when sorted, was placed near the furnace which was being used for that kind of material.

According to some of the testimony, when plaintiff went to work, on the morning of the accident, he was di'rented to use the red scrap; and, going to the pile, he found two balls on top thereof. Never having seen such material before upon the red scrap pile, he showed them, so he says, to Maine. Maine played with them a while, rolled them upon the floor, and finally replaced them upon the pile of scrap, and, according to plaintiff’s testimony, told him to put them in the melting pots. Plaintiff says Jie asked the foreman if they were all right, and was assured by the foreman that they were. Plaintiff thereupon took a new pot, put in some fine borings of brass, then the two balls, covered all up in the usual manner, put the pot on the furnace, and then returned to his usual work. Plaintiff says he had never before seen such balls, and that for this reason lie showed them to Maine. Maine himself íes[197]*197tifiecl that he realized the halls were dangerous; that he thought they might possibly be bombs; that„he discussed ■the matter with the engineer; and claims that, instead of telling plaintiff to put them in the pot, he placed them on top of boxes containing yellow brass, which were behind the red pile upon which plaintiff was working.

Shortly after the balls were put in the pot, and it had become heated, there was an explosion. Steelier, the head melter, rushed over to the furnace, as did other men about the foundry, and there saw the foreman, Maine. There was considerable confusion among the men and someone remarked: “Look out, there is another one.” Steelier noticed that the lid was blown off the pot and the crucible was considerably shattered; but, thinking there was no danger of a second explosion, he grabbed a pair of tongs, to pick out the pieces of metal for use in another pot. Steelier did not at this time knoiv that two brass balls had been put in the pot, and the foreman, although present, said nothing about it. Steelier also said that he did not think Hiere was any danger of a further explosion, because everything seemed to be blown to pieces. Plaintiff followed Steelier with another pair of tongs, to assist in the work. Maine, the foreman, was standing close at hand, but lie made no remarks. Someone asked Steelier what caused the explosion, and he said he thought it was one of the brass balls. Plaintiff and Steelier together went to work trying to rescue the pot and the brass before it ran down onto the grates of the furnace, and Stecher got hold of one side of the pot with his tongs and plaintiff of the other, Avlien a second explosion occurred. Plaintiff testified that he did not know whether there were two explosions in the first instance or but one; tliat he knew he had put the two balls in the pot, but did not know, when he went to the assistance of Steelier, that but one of them had exploded. We here quote some testimony from the record, regarding [198]*198what was done by the men, about the time of and just after the explosion. First, from the testimony of Maine on cross-examination:

“I heard a loud explosion like a cannon, when standing in front of the first boiler talking with Jecklin. I said to him, ‘There goes one of them brass balls, I bet you;’ and thought it ivas one of those balls that went off, because that was the first thing that came into my mind; had talked with Jecklin about the balls before that. I was the first man to look into the furnace; after the first explosion and before I got over there was about two seconds. The lid was off, the pot was shattered. Steelier and Jeez came a very few seconds after I got there, with tongs to remove the pieces of metal that were not melted. I stepped bad? to give them room, and they got one piece out when the other explosion occurred. The first thing after I got there was to ask Jeez if he put these balls in when he was standing at the furnace ready to take the pieces out, and he said he had.

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

Related

Skinner v. Polk County
98 N.W.2d 749 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1959)
Farwark v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.
211 N.W. 875 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1927)
Wangen v. Upper Iowa Power Co.
185 Iowa 110 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 Iowa 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeez-v-a-y-mcdonald-manufacturing-co-iowa-1917.