Knisley v. . Pratt

42 N.E. 986, 148 N.Y. 372, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 564
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 18, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 42 N.E. 986 (Knisley v. . Pratt) 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
Knisley v. . Pratt, 42 N.E. 986, 148 N.Y. 372, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 564 (N.Y. 1896).

Opinion

Bartlett, J.

The plaintiff seeks to recover damages for' loss of her left arm, caused by the alleged negligence of the defendants, who were the proprietors of a hardware factory where plaintiff was employed at the time of the accident in operating what is known as a “punching machine.”

*375 A person using this machine is seated at a bench, the top of which is about thirty-two inches from the floor and covered with . plank about five inches in thickness. The machine is about twenty-two inches wide and four feet high, with an iron bed plate bolted to the bench. Two iron posts four feet high, connected at the top by an iron cross piece, make a substantial frame for the machine.

Hear the top is a shaft passing through the posts on one end of which is a drum and belt connecting with shafting ; on the other end are a small cog wheel, about seven inches in diameter, running close to the frame and outside of it, and a large fly wheel.

Immediately under this shaft is another" shaft having a cog wheel about two feet in diameter, which is operated from the cog wheel on the upper shaft.

In the center of the lower, shaft is an iron rod to which is attached a punch, arranged on an eccentric so that the revolution of the shaft causes the punch to lift and lower sixty times per minute.

There was no shifter to throw off the belt so as to stop the machine and the cog wheels were unguarded.

The plaintiff, the machine being in motion, was engaged in cleaning it, which consisted in rubbing the dirt and oil off the punch and uprights with a piece of waste held in her left hand, and in some way her hand was caught between the cog wheels, causing such injuries to it and the arm as to necessitate amputation of the latter near the shoulder. Plaintiff, being of full age, entered the employ of defendants in May or June, 1890, and the accident happened September 24th, 1891; she testified that she worked off and on about three months on these punching machines prior to the accident, sometimes an hour, sometimes half a day at a time as required; that up to the time of the accident she had worked twelve different times on different days upon one of the punching machines and had cleaned it about seven or eight times.

It is insisted on behalf of the plaintiff that even if, under the admitted facts, she would by the rules of the common law *376 be deemed to have assumed not .only the ordinary, but the obvious risks of the business, yet the provisions of the statute commonly known as the Factory Act, would enable her to recover. (Ch. 398, Laws 1890, page 753, amending ch. 409, Laws 1886, entitled, “ An act to regulate the employment of women and children in manufacturing establishments and to provide for inspectors to enforce the same.”)

The complaint makes no reference to the statute, but charges the defendants in the usual way with neglect to provide safe and suitable machinery and a safe and proper place in which to work.

The statute was referred to at the trial in the General Term and on the argument before this court; we shall, therefore, consider this case as presenting the question whether the plaintiff is entitled to recover by reason of this statute, even if under the principles of the common law, as applied to the facts, she had assumed the obvious risks of the employment.

The statute (Laws 1890, ch. 398, p. 756, sec. 12) provides that it shall be the duty of the owner of any manufacturing establishment to furnish, in the discretion of the factory inspector, belt shifters for the purpose of throwing on or off belts or pulleys; it also pi’ovides absolutely that cogs shall be properly guarded.

The belt shifter is out of this case, as no effort was made to prove that the insjoector had ordered it to be placed on the machine which injured the plaintiff and that the owner had failed to obey. It is admitted that the cog wheels were unguarded bn this machine.

The plaintiff was injured by reason of that condition of the cog wheels, and it appears that a piece of sheet iron put in between the upright and the gear wheels would have protected the hand of the operative while cleaning the machine when in motion.

It was not unlawful to permit plaintiff to clean the machine when in motion, as the statute provides that “no female, under the age of twenty-one years, * * * shall be allowed to clean machinery when in motion.” (Ch. 398, *377 Laws 1890, sec. 12.) The plaintiff was over twenty-one years of age.

The defendants are chargeable, therefore, with one omission only under the statute, viz., a failure to properly guard the cog wheels of the punching machine.

In order to sustain the judgment in favor of plaintiff it is necessary to hold that where the statute imposes a duty upon the employer, the performance of which will afford greater protection to the employee, it is not possible for the latter to waive tire protection of the statute under the common-law ■doctrine of obvious risks.

We regard this as a new and startling doctrine calculated to establish a measure of liability unknown to the common law, and which is contrary to the decisions of Massachusetts and England under similar statutes.

It should be remarked at the outset that the Factory Act in this state does not, in terms, give a cause of action to one suffering an injury by reason of the failure of the employer to discharge his duty thereunder.

An action for such injury is the ordinary common-law action for negligence and subject to the rules of the common law. (Caswell v. Worth, 5 Ellis & Blackburn, 855.) The principle contended for seems to rest, if it can be maintained at all, upon a question of public policy. The Factory Act, it is said, is passed to regulate the employment of women and children and imposes upon the employer certain duties and subjects him to specified penalties in case of default; that a sound public policy requires the rigid enforcement of this act, and it would contravene that policy to permit an employee by implied contract or promise to waive the protection of the statute.

We think this proposition is essentially unsound and proceeds upon theories that cannot be maintained.

It is difficult to perceive any difference in the quality and character of a cause of action whether it has its origin in the ancient principles of the common law, in the formulated rules of modern decisions, or in the declared will of the legislature.

*378 Public policy in each case requires its rigid enforcement, and it was never urged in the common-law action for negligence that the rule requiring the employee to assume the obvious risks of the business was in contravention of that' policy.

It is possible that the statute imposes upon the employer duties under which he did not rest at common law.

It may be asked, if the doctrine of obvious risks is applied to the statute, under what circumstances could the employee sue?

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.E. 986, 148 N.Y. 372, 1896 N.Y. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knisley-v-pratt-ny-1896.