Lumbert v. Prince

203 Mich. 242
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1913
DocketDocket No. 95
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 203 Mich. 242 (Lumbert v. Prince) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lumbert v. Prince, 203 Mich. 242 (Mich. 1913).

Opinion

Steere, J.

In the fall of 1916 plaintiff was injured while in defendants’ employ at a portable sawmill located on their premises, engaged in sawing into lumber some logs cut from their land. The portable mill had connected with it a slab- or buzz-saw attachment and plaintiff’s work was to cut up the slabs for wood as they came from the logs which were being [244]*244sawed into lumber. The buzz-saw was so connected with the power appliances of the mill that it ran continuously whenever the machinery of the mill was in motion, whether in use or not. At an interval during which a log was being placed upon the carriage of the mill for sawing and the engine running with the buzz-saw in motion but not in use, plaintiff proceeded to clear away the saw-dust and other waste material accumulated around and under the saw at which he worked. While so engaged he slipped in such manner, as he testified, that his right hand came upon the swing table or platform of the unguarded slab saw and was swung into it, resulting in loss of its index and middle fingers with their metacarpal bones, permanently disabling and mutilating that member.

Defendants had not elected to come under the workmen’s compensation act, and plaintiff eventually brought this action in the circuit court of Eaton county to recover damages for injuries sustained in that accident, imputing the same to defendants’ negligence. The trial in that court resulted in verdict and judgment for defendants, to review which plaintiff has removed the case to this court on various assignments of error, of which those directed against portions of the charge and prejudicial conduct of defendants’ counsel are most seriously urged.

Plaintiff’s declaration charged negligence in failure of defendants to provide him a safe place in which to work, or reasonable safe appliances and machinery with which to do the work for which he was employed; that the buzz-saw rig attachment of the portable mill was “a mere contrivance fixed up for the occasion,” not properly constructed or safe-guarded as customary with those in common use, not equipped with a cover to guard the saw or any device to hold the table from swinging when the saw was running but not sawing, etc.

[245]*245Defendants pleaded the general issue, with special notice of settlement, assumption of risk and negligence on the part of plaintiff. During the progress of the trial defendants were allowed to amend their notice to the effect that they did not own or control the “machinery connected with the buzz-saw,” at which it was not disputed they had employed plaintiff to work, and then introduced testimony that a contractor was sawing their logs for a price per thousand feet.

Under the issue raised by the pleadings conflicting evidence was introduced by the parties fairly presenting questions of fact as to defendants’ alleged negligence and their claim of settlement. The testimony was largely directed to those two contentions. Several witnesses who had owned and operated portable sawmills were called as experts by each side. Their conflicting testimony fairly supported the claims of the respective parties calling them as to the safe or unsafe condition, construction and manner of operating this buzz-saw according to approved and commonly adopted equipment and methods in that line of business. In concluding his cross-examination upon this subject of one of plaintiff’s witnesses with over 15 years’ experience in operating portable mills, who testified the saw should be guarded and under the exposed condition shown the place provided for plaintiff to work was “dangerous and unsafe,” defendants’ counsel suddenly changed the subject and asked, “What relation are you to this fellow, anyway?” being answered, “Not any,” he exclaimed, “Good for you, that is all.” Upon plaintiff’s counsel objecting to this reflection as intended to prejudice the jury the court replied, “I think the jury will not take that very serious.” The more serious impropriety of this nature arose as follows: Plaintiff had signed a receipt to defendants for their payment of “Doctor bill, hospital expense and wages for four weeks,” amounting to [246]*246$98, which concluded, “To cover damages in accident for loss of fingers.” He claimed to have been misled into signing so far as the concluding portion was concerned, supposing it only a receipt for the items stated which defendants had assumed or paid. In his cross-examination as to a time when he was in the office of defendants’ counsel the following occurred:

“Q. There was a man with you?
“A. Yes, sir, he told me you sent for me to come up there.
“Q. That I sent for you?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Counsel: What a liar you are!”

Upon exception and objection to such treatment of plaintiff while a witness as prejudicial to his case, the court, without reprimanding counsel, said to the jury, “Of course, gentlemen, you are supposed to give no attention to a remark of that kind; sometimes remarks come when we can’t avoid it,” which defendants’ counsel supplemented by the exclamation — “For a man to sit there and tell me that!” As there is no testimony to the contrary, the turpitude of the witness in testifying that a man who admittedly accompanied him to counsel’s office had told him before they went that counsel had sent for him to come up there is only indicated in this record by the assertion of counsel that the witness was a liar and his expressed astonishment, in furtherance of the court’s unfortunate intimation that calling the witness a liar was, under the circumstances, irresistible and in the category of remarks which sometimes come “when we can’t avoid them,” illustrated by counsel’s concluding expression of emotion which was tolerated without reprimand. The prejudicial effect of counsel’s conduct certainly was not relieved by the court’s caution to the jury.

The defense quite apparently stressed during the [247]*247trial not only freedom from negligence on the part of defendants, which was a legitimate defense, but the claims which had been pleaded that plaintiff assumed the risk and was himself negligent — defenses now denied to employers not operating under the workmen’s compensation law which provides as to them (section 1, part 1, 2 Comp. Laws 1915, § 5423) that: .

“In an action to recover damages for personal injury sustained by an employee in the course of his employment * * * it shall not be a defense:
“(a.) That the employee was negligent, unless and except it shall appear that such negligence was wilful;
“(b) That the injury was caused by the negligence of a fellow employee;
“(c) That the employee had assumed the risks inherent in or incidental to, or arising out of his employment, or arising from the failure of the employer to provide and maintain safe premises and suitable appliances.”

While the court early in the charge correctly advised the jury of these provisions as applicable in the case, later in the charge they were instructed without subsequent modification or explanation, as follows:

“I instruct you that a servant, in this case the plaintiff, must bear the consequences of all ordinary risks incident to his employment including that from machinery with which he was working.”

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Related

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187 N.W. 374 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1922)
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Bluebook (online)
203 Mich. 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lumbert-v-prince-mich-1913.