Jefferson Theatre Program Co. v. Crejczyk

125 Ill. App. 1, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 214
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 1, 1906
DocketGen. No. 12,309
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 125 Ill. App. 1 (Jefferson Theatre Program Co. v. Crejczyk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jefferson Theatre Program Co. v. Crejczyk, 125 Ill. App. 1, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 214 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Me. Justice Bbowy

delivered the opinion of the court.

The evidence in this case shows the following state of facts: The plaintiff was a boy fifteen years and one month old when the accident which is the basis of this action happened, on June 30, 1902. In January, 1902, he had first worked on a printing press. He was then employed by the Badger Printing 'Company, but was occupied with duties other than printing for about half the time. The printing’ press that he worked on was a Chandler & Price press, a variety of the type known as “Gordon” presses, and the work he did on the press was the printing of envelopes, cards, bill-heads and like work.

After two months’ employment with the Badger Printing Company he went to work for five days feeding a Chandler & Price press for the Phantis Printing Company, the'printing being of a like character. Prom there he went to the printing establishment of the appellant, the defendant below. This was in the latter part of March, 1902. In a conversation with the superintendent when his employment began, the plaintiff was asked if he bad worked in feeding a Gordon press. He answered that he had, a Chandler & Price press for about two months. By the defendant.he was employed to sweep the establishment and to feed a Peerless press, another variety of the Gordon press. Defendant’s expert witness at the trial said this was a more difficult press for a boy to feed than a Chandler & Price press, because the sheets to be printed in the Peerless press have to be laid on the platen while it is an inclined plane, whereas in a Chandler press they are laid on a flat surface, the platen coming up farther from the form for that purpose. The Peerless press at which plaintiff was put to work by defendant opened and closed as it was running at the time of the accident every three seconds, and there was no way for the feeder to regulate the speed. Of course it closed with force enough, if allowed to complete its motion, to cut off a person’s fingers caught between its jaws, that is, between the platen and the form. The plaintiff was evidently, as appears from the record, of scant height to stand at the press and reach in between the platen and the form accurately to adjust the sheets to be printed in their proper position on the platen, if there was any difficulty or slip in the ordinary handling, making necessary such an adjustment.

The place or positoin in which the sheet to be printed was ’ to be laid was indicated by some obstructions (called guides) fastened to or into the platen or bed against which the bottom edge and one of the side edges of the paper would rest, thus insuring its position being exactly correct when the platen brought it up against the form which held the type.

TVro thin strips of elastic steel about an inch wide fastened to a turning bar at the throat of the machine between platen and form, generally called nippers in the testimony in this case, held the paper in place as it approached and receded from the form. They were so placed of course that they fell on such portions or margins of the paper to be printed as'did not have to meet the type.

At the left of the press was a lever called a throw-off lever. By working this lever, the handle of which was convenient to the left hand of the feeder, the motion of the platen toward the form was checked at about half an inch or more from their point of meeting, and the press opened again as though it had printed. This throw-off is therefore used when the sheet to be printed is in any way out of-the exact position it should occupy, as shown by the guides, to prevent the press from actually closing and thus printing until the sheet is fully and precisely adjusted, when the lever being again moved, the platen will come to the form and the impression be made. It is obvious therefore that in any case where the adjustment requires something more of manual action than can be used altogether outside of the jaws of the press, the only practically safe method of work, considering the speed with which the machine moves, is to throw off the lever before inserting the hand.

The first job on this Peerless press given to the plaintiff was printing envelopes; afterwards he printed programmes for the theatres, and this employment, Avith other duties around the establishment, had lasted for tAvo months at the time of the accident.

On the day in question he was during the forenoon engaged in feeding the press “various pieces of light Avork,” but in the afternoon, the foreman of appellánt called him to print the red ink characters on about a hundred price lists on A\Thich the impressions in black ink, constituting the great bulk of' the contents of the sheets, had been made. This is called a re-register job. The sheets must obviously be placed with precision or they Avill be spoiled and the work already done on them wasted. The bottom of the sheets AAras rough. The pressman had arranged the form and the guides and all that the plaintiff had to do was the feeding. The guides were ordinary brass pins, Avhich had been fixed in the platen. Previously, when plaintiff had fed the press the guides had been quads or slugs of lead fastened to the platen by paste, and this is their usual form. The plaintiff testified that quads being thicker than pins, the sheets are not so likely to get caught on them in an inaccurate position, and this was not contradicted. He further testified that the guide pin at the side stuck out so little that the sheet to be printed had to be pressed down to get it under the head of the pin.

Plaintiff, although told by the foreman that the job Avas a rush job and that he Avas to get it off as quickly as he could, was careful enough of his oavix safety and of the accuracy and neatness of the work, to pull the throw-off lever towards him frequently,—“every other sheet or so/’ a witness working next to him testified, and prevent the press from closing or printing until he had time to adjust the paper. Of course this prevented any danger of his hand being caught. When the sheet was precisely adjusted, (it being more difficult to secure such adjustment on account of the rough bottom edge of the sheets than it would have been had they been smooth), the plaintiff would throw the lever back and the press would close. As each sheet was printed he would take it out and put in another.

In this way he had finished fifty or sixty of the hundred sheets to be printed, when the foreman came along and with profanity ordered him to hurry—told him that people were waiting for the job down stairs, that it was a rush job, that he was to let the throw-off lever alone and go ahead feeding, and let the press come together every time the platen moved. The plaintiff answered, he testifies, that he didn’t know anything about the job, that it was a close register job, and that he couldn’t feed any faster. Being thus ordered to go on faster, however, the plaintiff attempted, immediately after the foreman had passed on, to adjust with his left hand a sheet which had stuck on the left hand pin guide at the bottom without pulling the lever and thus giving himself time to do it safely. Before he could get his hand out, the platen and form had come together, and in their coming together cut off his thumb entirely, crushed his forefinger so as to render amputatiqn necessary, breaking also the bones in the next two fingers.

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Bluebook (online)
125 Ill. App. 1, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-theatre-program-co-v-crejczyk-illappct-1906.