LaGrand v. Arkansas Oak Flooring Co.

245 S.W. 38, 155 Ark. 585, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 210
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 20, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 245 S.W. 38 (LaGrand v. Arkansas Oak Flooring Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LaGrand v. Arkansas Oak Flooring Co., 245 S.W. 38, 155 Ark. 585, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 210 (Ark. 1922).

Opinion

Wood, J.

This is an action by the appellant against the appellee to recover damages for personal injuries. The appellant alleged that the appellee was a corporation, and that he was in its employ, and that while in the discharge of his duty, and free from any carelessness on his part, on the 9th day of August, 1921, through the negligence of the appellee, a large belt in the appellee’s plant broke, one end of which struck the appellant about the head and left eye, which rendered him blind in that eye; that the appellee was negligent in failing to furnish the appellant a safe place to work and in failing to properly inspect the belt in use, and in’ removing the hood which was placed over the belt. He prayed judgment for damages in the sum of $10,000.

Appellee, in its answer, denied all the material allegations of the complaint, and set up the affirmative defenses of contributory negligence and assumed risk.

The testimony of the appellant tended to prove that he was employed at the sawmill plant of the appellee as a common laborer. On the day he was injured he was putting boards on the table for the rip-sawyer. He was fourteen or fifteen feet away from the belt that broke. When the belt broke, the belt, or piece of it, hit the appellant in the eye, which put it out. One witness testified that on the day before the accident he had worked on the belt that broke and injured the appellant.; that he had fixed it with glue. The belt came apart where it was glued ’ and several pieces whipped off and flew in different directions. Some were as large as your hand and some were not larger than your thumb. The belt was running very fast. There was no top o,n the box the day appellant was injured. The top was there for the protection of the employees. If the top had been on, the belt was not liable to fly out, but would have gone underneath. The hood should have been there, but was off to oil the bearings and had not been put back. If it had been on the appellant would not have been hurt. The belt was old. It had been used and spliced. It should be looked after every day. If it had been looked at that afternoon, it could have been discovered that-it was coming loose.

Photographs of the rip-saw and premises showing where the appellant was situated on the day'of his injury were identified by the photographer who took these pictures, and also by one of the owners of the plant, as being correct representations of the premises.

There was testimony on behalf of the appellee tending to prove that the place where the appellant was standing at the time of his injury was 23 feet from the belt; that it was not possible for the belt to reach over and strike the appellant. There was testimony tending to prove that the fender box housing the belt was properly constructed; that a top was not necessary on a machine of that make; that in mills constructed as this one was it was not customary to have housing or a top over the driving pulley. There was further testimony tending to show that the belt was of a reliable quality and properly constructed; that immediately after the appellant was injured the place where he was standing was examined and no piece of the belt was found that could have struck him. A piece of belt was found about a foot from where it came off the pulley. The belt itself was examined, and the whole belt was intact except a small piece about six inches wide.

Witnesses who were familiar with the premises and the construction of the belt and pulley, after testifying concerning these, stated that in their opinion it was not possible for the belt to come out of its housing and hit a man where .the appellant was standing, and that it would have been more dangerous for the belt to have had a housing or covering over it than without. There was testimony tending to prove that the belt had been inspected the day of the accident, and before the injury occurred.

The issues of negligence and assumption of risk were sent to the jury under instructions which will be referred to later. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the appellee. The motion for new trial, assigning the various errors upon which the appellant relies, was overruled. We will refer later to such of these assignments of error as we deem necessary. From a judgment in favor of the appellee is this appeal.

1. After the appellant had exercised his challenges to the list furnished him from which to make up the jury, he asked the court to permit'him to challenge juror High-tower and to accept in lieu of him juror 0 ’Connell. Appellant stated to the court that his attention had just been called to the fact that one E. A. Howell was vice-president and a director of a certain trust company and also vice-president and a director of the appellee; that juror Hightower was also an officer of the same trust company, and that for the reasons stated appellant wished the privilege of then challenging Hightower and accepting 0 ’Connell, who at that time had left the room. The court refused the request, to which ruling appellant duly excepted.

It is not contended that Hightower had any interest, direct or remote, in the appellee. He was a qualified juror, and it was within the.discretion of the court at that juncture to refuse the above request of the appellant to substitute another juror for him. There was no abuse of this discretion. Rumping v. National Bank of Hot Springs, 121 Ark. 203; Funkhouser v. Pugue, 13 Ark. 295; Decker v. Laws, 74 Ark. 286; Lavender v. Hudgins, 32 Ark. 763.

2. The photographs were duly authenticated. They were shown to he correct representations of the locus in quo at the time the appellant was injured. They were therefore “admissible as evidence to aid the court or jury to understand the evidence, and witnesses to explain their testimony.” K. C. S. R. Co. v. Morris, 80 Ark. 528-534; Young v. State, 144 Ark. 71; see also Zinn and Chaney v. State, 135 Ark. 342.

3. Dr. Breathwit, who qualified as an expert in the treatment of the eye, after describing the nature of the wound to the appellant’s eye, was asked this question: “Was the wound which you found upon your examination made at the time such as could have been made by appellant himself in stooping down and striking his eye against some object?” The witness, over the objection of appellant, was permitted to answer the question, and answered in the affirmative.

Conceding, without deciding, that the question was an improper one, the appellant is not in an attitude to complain of the ruling of the court. For the error, if it be an error, was waived by the appellant by not objecting to a precisely similar question propounded by appellee’s counsel on cross-examination to an expert witness which appellant had introduced to prove the nature of the injury to appellant’s eye.

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Bluebook (online)
245 S.W. 38, 155 Ark. 585, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lagrand-v-arkansas-oak-flooring-co-ark-1922.