Lore v. American Manufacturing Co.

61 S.W. 678, 160 Mo. 608, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 81
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 12, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 61 S.W. 678 (Lore v. American Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lore v. American Manufacturing Co., 61 S.W. 678, 160 Mo. 608, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 81 (Mo. 1901).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

This is a civil action for damages to plaintiff, an employee in a jute factory owned and operated by defendant, on the twenty-fourth of November, 1894, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of defendant in failing to safely guard its gearing on a machine used for spinning jute in [612]*612the manufacture of bagging, as required by an act of the General Assembly, approved April 20, 1891, and in permitting the guard to said gearing to become and remain out of repair, whereby plaintiff’s right hand and forearm were, without fault on her part, thrown through said guard and into the cog-wheels and gearing of said machine and were torn, lacerated and crushed.

The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence.

There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $2,750, from which defendant appeals.

The facts appear to be that at the time of the accident plaintiff was a girl about sixteen years old. She brought the action soon after she reached her majority. The cause was tried in 1896, before a special jury, and she was awarded $2,000. Defendant apjoealed to the St. Louis Court of Appeals and that court for error in- the instructions reversed and remanded the cause. The case is reported as Colliott v. American Mfg. Co., 71 Mo. App. 163. Since then plaintiff has married and her present name is Rose Lore.

There is little if any conflict in the evidence. Plaintiff was employed at the time of the accident as spinner in the defendant’s factory or bagging mill, known as the Southern Mills, in the city of St. Louis. The machine by which she was injured is a large machine some nineteen feet in length and about four feet wide, and is known as a spinning machine. It is operated by two girls, the spinner, who is ordinarily in front, and the “end-minder,” whose ordinary position is in the rear; but it is the duty of both girls to keep the machine running, and to pass around the frame to help one another whenever necessary. The material used is what is commercially known as jute butts, which is manufactured into bagging for covering bales of cotton. In the rear of the machine are forty-[613]*613eight cans filled with this material in the form of long strings called sliver, which are carried through the machine from the rear to the front in the process of spinning.

This sliver is loose and flimsy and easily parted, and it is the business of the two girls to watch and “fix up” the ends whenever they break down, that is to say, whenever one of the strings of sliver happens to break there is what is known as an “end” which has to be fixed- up by the operators. Ordinarily it is the duty of the spinner to fix up the ends in the front, and of the “end-minder” in the rear, but it frequently happens that a number of ends break down at once in the rear of the machine, and it is necessary on these occasions, in order to keep the machine running, for the-spinner to pass around to the rear and help the “end-minder” put them up. In behalf of plaintiff at the trial was produced the testimony of plaintiff herself, and five other employees of the factory, s-pinners and “end-minders,” all of whom testified that it was the duty of the spinners and “end-minders” to help one another in their work whenever it was necessary in order to keep the machine running, and to pass around the machine whenever necessary for that purpose.

The floor of the factory is conceded to have been very slippery, so much so as to be very hard to walk upon, and persons walking were liable to slip and fall at any moment. The jute material was prepared for spinning with an oil which was rubbed into the floor by the constant sweeping of the waste jute over the floor, and also a considerable quantity of the oil used for lubricating the machinery was thrown off upon the floor and rubbed in in the same manner.

The driving machinery or gearing of the machine was located at one end, being the end opposite to plaintiff’s ordinary position in operating the machine, and was located on a narrow passage between plaintiff’s machine and the next ma[614]*614chine in the same row. This passage was only about two feet wide, or barely wide enough to allow the girls to pass through in the discharge of their ordinary duties; and in order to protect the employees passim/ through this narrow aisle from the cog-wheels at the end of plaintiff’s machine, there was placed in front of and around this gearing a guard, consisting of vertical iron rods about three-eighths of an inch in thickness, fixed above and below to iron bars or crosspieces. These rods or guard-wires in front of the gearing were located about an inch and one-half apart, and were made of soft iron, round, and about three feet in length; but prior to the accident to plaintiff, several of these rods or wires had become bent, so as to produce a considerable opening just at the comer of the machine, which was large enough to allow the hand of any ordinary person who might fall on the slippery floor, to pass through so as to come into contact with the dangerous cog-wheels or gearing of the machine. Severed of plaintiff’s witnesses testified that the opening was large enough to allow the first volume of the Revised Statutes of Missouri of 1889 to be passed through1 in the direction of Us thickness. According to all the witnesses, the opening which existed beforehand was several inches wide, and large enough to allow plaintiff’s hand to easily pass through.' The opening was probably produced by the employees who had been working-on the machine in previous years taking hold of the wires in order to hold themselves up and keep themselves'from falling upon the slippery floor in going around the machine, and there is some testimony going to show that this has been the custom of some of the girls in the factory. That this custom is probably the cause of the opening is indicated by the fact that the opening was located just at the corner, which was the place where the employees were in the habit of taking hold of the wires in passing around the machine. Owing to the greasy [615]*615floor there was danger of slipping and consequently of falling, just at the corner, and at the place where this opening in the guard was located.

At the time of the accident, plaintiff had been working on the machine for less than three days, having been put to work on this machine on Thursday and the accident occurring on Saturday afternoon. Her ordinary position in tending the machine was at the opposite end from the defective guard, and she did not notice or see the opening until the same day when she was hurt.

Immediately prior to the accident plaintiff and her “endmjnder” began to run out of material, and the ends were rapidly breaking in the rear of the machine, and it became necessary for plaintiff to go around to the rear to help the “end-minder” put up the ends in order to keep the machine running. That this was the duty of the plaintiff under the circumstances is unanimously testified to by all the girls who work at the factory who were sworn at the trial, being six in number, who state that such was the universal custom amongst all the girls in the factory, and that they were scolded by the foreman when they neglected to do so. In order to induce the girls to help one another to keep the machine running, they were put upon piece work, or paid according to the amount of work which was turned out by their machine, thereby making it to their interest to help one another at all times.

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.W. 678, 160 Mo. 608, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lore-v-american-manufacturing-co-mo-1901.