Kirwan v. . American Lithographic Co.

90 N.E. 945, 197 N.Y. 413, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1083
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 8, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 90 N.E. 945 (Kirwan v. . American Lithographic Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirwan v. . American Lithographic Co., 90 N.E. 945, 197 N.Y. 413, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1083 (N.Y. 1910).

Opinion

Edward T. Bartlett, J.

,The plaintiff was fourteen years and three months old at the time she entered the service of the defendant company, a large bookbinding establishment in the city of Hew York. This was her first employment, having been taken from St. Joseph’s Orphan Asylum for the purpose. She met with the accident, which is the foundation of this action, about ten days after entering upon the discharge of her duties. For at least two-thirds of that time she had been engaged in light work that involved no danger from proximity to machinery. About four days prior to the accident hereinafter referred to, the plaintiff was assigned to the duty of assisting two young women known as u stitchers,” whose duty it was to run stitching machines, fastened to a table, underneath which extended a revolving shaft furnishing the necessary power.

This action was brought under the Labor La.w, and the notice required by that statute was duly served on the defendant, the material portion of which reads, referring to the plaintiff: “ Her injuries were caused by her hair being caught in an unguarded revolving shaft * * * at which said Amelia Kirwan (the plaintiff) was working at the time she received her injury, due to the fact that said shafting was not properly guarded in the manner required by law; also owing to the negligence of your company for failing to provide a safe and suitable place in which to do her work; also owing to the failure of the superintendent, or the person charged with or exercising the duties of superintendent, to warn her of the danger of said revolving shaft.”

The plaintiff’s place of work was in a room on the fifth floor of ‘ the factory building, in which were a large number of stitching machines run by power conveyed to many of them from overhead shafting, but in the case of the machines near which the plaintiff was assigned to duty and a few others in that immediate locality, the power was received from *416 a shaft about an inch and three-quarters in diameter immediately under the table upon which the stitching machines rested. A belt hole was cut through the top of the table and the belting passed from the shaft through it to the gear wheel of the machine. The superintendent in this room was a Miss Blondell, who employed the plaintiff originally; additional supervision was exercised by a floor walker named Bell. The two young women stitchers, to whom reference has been made, each operated a stitching machine, and it was the duty of plaintiff to hand them unstitched sheets of pamphlets and to take them away when stitched. The plaintiff said, in speaking of these girls“ They operated two machines and I knocked up for these two operators. * * * I was right close up to the machines. As the stitcher put her work through the machine she threw" it on to this table and then I started to count it and pile it up into piles containing twenty-five pamphlets each.” i

The description of these tables upon which the machines rested is material at this point. It was proved that the table was about the ordinary height, twenty-six inches, and parallel with the table and fastened to the legs thereof was a board four inches wide which was placed against the lower side of the table, making the open space below twenty-two inches from the floor. Further down on the legs of the table and two inches from the floor, a second board was "fastened, running parallel with the first one, being about six inches wide. The width of the lower board added to the two inches of space between it and the floor was about eight inches. This left a clear open space between the two boards of about fourteen inches, affording an opportunity to reach under the table.

It appears that in the course of this work from time to time some of the stitched pamphlets, in being handled rapidly, would fall upon the floor. At the time of the accident one or more pamphlets slipped down through the belt hole to the floor under the table. The plaintiff, in availing herself of the fourteen inches of clear space, reached in under the table to *417 pick up the pamphlets lying on the floor. It was proved that this shafting underneath the table was about four inches from the top of the table and an inch and three-quarters in diameter. The plaintiff testified in this connection as follows: “ When the books fell from the table they fell down into the belt hole on to the floor under the table. When I was hurt I was stooping down to pick up those books. From where I worked at this table I could not see that iron bar. I never saw that iron bar before I was hurt. Miss Blondell never told me that the bar was under the table. Mr. Bell never told me that the bar was under the table. Nobody ever told me before I was hurt that the bar was under the table.”

The plaintiff further testified : “ While I was working in this factory, and before I was hurt, I knew of a rule of the factory in reference to work that had fallen on the floor. Q. Kindly state what the rule was 1 A. The rule was to keep all good work off the floor. The work that I stooped down to pick up off the floor was stitched work; it was clean work. I received instructions about picking up work off the floor. I received these instructions from Miss Blondell.” Mr. Bell, the floorwalker, was examined and stated as follows: “ Q. During the time that the plaintiff worked there, was it customary for girls to pick up work that had fallen on the floor ? A. Yes.”

It thus appears that the plaintiff was injured by going into a place of danger where the shafting was unguarded, she being instructed generally to pick up work from the floor without being warned of the existence of this shaft.

The defendant has sought to shield itself from this clear violation of the Labor Law, in so leaving the shaft unguarded, by arguing that the parallel boards on tlié side of the table were an effort to guard this shaft. There is no proof that these boards were put on for any such purpose, and if so intended, they were in no sense a guarding of the shafting. They were obviously put on to strengthen a table of considerable length subjected to the vibration of machinery in motion. The effect of the upper board was to hide the shafting — not *418 to guard it; the lower board obviously did not guard it. If the master hires young children, especially girls with long .hair, to work near revolving shafting, it is his duty to guard it, and in so doing to take into consideration their age, inexperience and lack of care and discretion, and adopt a shield or device that will prevent the liability of their heads coming into contact with dangerous machinery while engaged in the performance of the work assigned them.

The defendant sought further to shield itself from liability by claiming that a diagram it put in evidence showed that the clear space to enter under the table was ten and a half inches only. These figures were not proved and the trial judge stated that the diagram was admitted simply for the purpose of showing the location of the tables and the measurements already given, which were the heighth and width of the table.

The injuries inflicted upon the plaintiff were of a most serious and permanent character. On being released from the shaft about which her hair had become entangled, she was taken immediately to Bellevue Hospital, where she spent many months under treatment. She was treated immediately upon her arrival at the hospital by one Dr.

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Related

Thedford v. . Herbert
87 N.E. 798 (New York Court of Appeals, 1909)
Kirwan v. American Lithographic Co.
124 A.D. 180 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 N.E. 945, 197 N.Y. 413, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1083, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirwan-v-american-lithographic-co-ny-1910.