Johnson v. Pickering Land & Timber Co.

61 So. 514, 132 La. 425, 1913 La. LEXIS 1892
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 17, 1913
DocketNo. 19,271
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 61 So. 514 (Johnson v. Pickering Land & Timber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Pickering Land & Timber Co., 61 So. 514, 132 La. 425, 1913 La. LEXIS 1892 (La. 1913).

Opinion

PROYOSTY, J.

tt] Plaintiff’s minor son, for whose use plaintiff brings this suit in damages, was employed by the defendant company to operate a planer machine in its planing mill. A large belt, 12 inches wide and 47 feet long, and composed of two thicknesses of leather, broke, and simultaneously the young man suffered the injuries in question. Whether he was struck by one of the ends of the broken belt, or struck himself against the detached tongue of a lumber truck which he was in the act of stooping to pick up, and whether the breaking of the belt was due to some inherent defect or to negligent repair work, are the questions in the case.

The pulleys upon which the belt ran were upon horizontal shafts at a considerable height above the floor upon which the young man stood. That one of these pulleys which pulled or drove the belt was six feet in diameter and about ten feet from the floor. The other, or the driven, pulley was about one-fourth of this diameter, and about four feet higher up. The strain was upon the under or lower half of the belt; in other words, it was this underhalf that was moving towards the large or driving pulley. The young man was in line with the belt, and this underhalf was moving • towards him; that is to say, in his direction and downwards. There was a sort of hanging platform, 24 inches wide, serving as a guard, under the entire length of the belt; but the end of this platform was open, and, when this taut underhalf of the belt broke, there was nothing to prevent it from shooting out through this aperture and reaching the young man, who stood only some 10 or 12 feet off. And the very great probability is that it did do so, for the strain upon it must have been immense and its impetus tremendous. It was revolving a blow fan that drove off through conduits, to a distance outside of the building, the trash and debris of as many as eight planer machines, and it was going at a mile a minute.

No one saw the occurrence. The young [428]*428man only knows that he heard the belt snap, and that he simultaneously received the blow which caused his injuries. At first he was but dazed and remained on his feet, but almost immediately he lost consciousness, and it was only after he had been carried to the company’s hospital close by that he revived. He says of his wounds:

“I got my eye knocked out and a hole in the side of my face, and one of my hands was hurt, and two places in my side and one of my arms.”

The physician says that the edge of the bone socket of the eye was fractured.

We need hardly mention how extremely improbable it is that these numerous wounds could have been inflicted by the young man on himself by knocking against the detached truck tongue which lay at his feet on the floor, no matter how greatly startled he may have been — even admitting that he was startled and that he did knock himself — as to neither of which there is any evidence; whereas the underhalf of this belt, when it snapped under the enormous strain upon it, and going at lightning speed as it was, must have shot forward with tremendous force, whipping and wriggling, and might well have inflicted these wounds, and even more numerous and serious ones.

Hence we may safely, we think, pass to the consideration of the next question, as to whether the break was due to inherent defect or to negligent repair work.

This belt was of the best make and quality. The ordinary life of such a belt is not less than 18 months. This one had been in use but 8 months. The two thicknesses of leather composing the belt are glued or cemented together so as to form a homogeneous whole. They are necessarily made up of a number of pieces placed end to end. These pieces lap where they meet, their ends being so beveled, or feathered, at this lap as to leave the belt of uniform thickness. Several days (number of days not specified) before the accident, one corner of one of these feathered ends had become detached to the extent of about an inch and a half, and the foreman had mended it by using rivets. After having struck the young man, the end of the belt wrapped itself around a beam which formed the top of the aperture at the end of the hanging platform through which this end of the belt had projected itself, and the continued pull of the large pulley caused a second break. One of these breaks was at the place that had been repaired with rivets; the other was at another of the laps. This second break was, of course, but a consequence of the first. Which one of them occurred first is one of the disputed points.

Defendant’s foreman is positive that it was not the one at the rivets. When asked, on cross-examination, what he founded this positive knowledge on, the following was his answer:

“Q. Now, why is it that you say it broke the first time in one of the factory laps and did not break the first time where the rivets were?
“A. Simply this belt was running in this direction, that the lap on the belt was running were made in opposite direction from the end of the belt where the rivet was; consequently it would have been an impossibility for this break here to have broken first and for this belt following up or flying' up to go over that and wrap around that timber. This lay here, take this from the position the belt was in when broke, say this is the pulley, this belt broke some place in the front of this pulley where the strain was. This belt, being relieved of any strain, was free to come right over like that, thereby falling over that timber. This belt or this piece of bolt here, being about 40 feet and going at a high rate of speed, simply jerked it in two at that point; the main piece going over the front of the line shaft.
“Q. Now that theory is based on your opinion that the belt broke at what point with reference to the wheel at what position of the wheel?
“A. It broke at the portion in front of this driving wheel, between the driven wheel and the driving wheel, where the strain was on the belt, and consequently this end of the belt, relieved of any strain, was free to come right over and just flop up over that timber, and it was hanging where the belt stopped on the timber, like that, just a half hitch like that [illustrating with hands].” ■

[430]*430What the witness meant by this perhaps he himself might have been able to explain; but he did not. To us it is meaningless.

Defendant sought to establish by this same witness and the foremen of other mills that where a belt breaks in more than one place, as this one did, it is possible for an expert to tell which break occurred first. But the testimony of these experts, as we understand it, is simply to the effect that the circumstances generally indicate which break was first — a statement with which, we are sure, no one would find fault.

The “circumstances” in the present case were that one part of the belt, about eight feet long, remained upon the beam or timber in question, around which it had wrapped itself, both its ends hanging down, and that the other part fell to the floor underneath, and somewhat beyond, the driven pulley. No one pretends to say that the latter part, as it lay on the floor, furnished any indication whatever of which break was first.

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Bluebook (online)
61 So. 514, 132 La. 425, 1913 La. LEXIS 1892, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-pickering-land-timber-co-la-1913.