Makoski v. Union Bag & Paper Co.

136 A.D. 110, 120 N.Y.S. 517, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4280
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 30, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 136 A.D. 110 (Makoski v. Union Bag & Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Makoski v. Union Bag & Paper Co., 136 A.D. 110, 120 N.Y.S. 517, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4280 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinions

Kellogg, J.:

The plaintiff alleges that his son, the intestate, by reason of the defendant’s negligence, fell through its chip bin into a pulp digester where he was killed and “ eaten ” up by the acids therein contained. Chip bin Mo. 1 is a circular wooden tank, about twenty-five feet in diameter and about fifteen feet high from floor to roof. The bottom. of the bin i^ about parallel with its top, and above it is a floor slanting from the side towards an opening in the center, at an angle at its steepest part .of about forty-five degrees. In the center the floor slants down in a kind of a chute to an opening of about twenty-four by twenty-six inches, and below this opening is a movable funnel or hopper which connects the chute with the top of the digester below. The digester is a large cylindrical tank, lined with brick and lead, with a capacity of 50,000 gallons of liquid. The bin is filled with small wooden chips, which run .down the chute into the digester which, when the bin is full, is filled with powerful acids and heated with steam to a temperature of about 300 degrees Fahrenheit. The chips are then cooked in this digester for ten or eleven hours. The slanting floor of the bin and the chute are very smooth. . Inside the bin is a. flat platform about five by ten .feet, upon which a man stands with a fork and forces the chips down into the chute and prevents their clogging, thus insuring a steady flow until the contents of the bin are discharged.

The intestate was an employee in the mill but had had nothing to do with a chip bin until the day in question: The “ cooker,” Bott[112]*112gar, required a man to, go into the bin and the intestate was sent. The cooker was a, Swede, the intestate a Polander, and neither could understand the language of the other. From the evidence the jury would have been justified in finding the following additional facts : The cooker took the intestate into bin No. 4 and with a pitchfork and by,his motions showed him what to do, and then left him to discharge the bin, which he did in about half an hour. Bin No. 4 was smaller than No. 1 and' constructed somewhat differently. It sloped inwardly from the top towards the opening in the bottom-The opening was about twelve inches square and there was no flat platform upon which the employee stood. After bin No. 4 was discharged the cooker took the intestate to bin No. 1, and together they lifted the hopper from the floor of the mill and adjusted it between the chip bin and its digester. It is not clear just how much the intestate then saw of the opening in the bin above him, or what- inferences he drew from it, or from the apparently flat bottom of'the bin. They then climbed the ladder leading into the bin. The cooker descended the ladder on the inside. He dug away some of the chips over the platform, leaving it covered with chips to a depth of four or five feet. . With a fork he then indicated to the intestate what was to be done. He then ascended the ladder and the intestate descended into the bin, and when the cooker saw him at work properly he left him there. A sixteen candle power electric light was at the top of the bin and fairly lighted the inside. A few minutes after, at about ten minutes of eleven o’clock, the cooker, who was about to leave for the night and to be replaced by another cooker, ascertained tliat the intestate was at work in the bin. ■ He told Teeling, the cooker taking his place, that there was a green man in the bin, a. Polander who could not speak English. About ten minutes after this information Teeling was informed that the chips were not running from bin No. 1, and that no one was at work therein. He sent another man into the bin who discharged its contents until the digester was full, the acids and steam were turned on and the contents of the digester cooked for ten or eleven hours in the usual manner. In the morning the intestate’s father came to the mill inquiring for his son and, upon investigation, his coat, hat and dinner pail.were found in their accustomed place, but nothing could be learned of. his whereabouts [113]*113and lie was not seen alive thereafter. The digester was immediately cleaned and its contents carefully scrutinized, among which were found three human teeth, a molar, bicuspid and an incisor, and a human patella, the right knee cap. The action of the contents of the digester would be such that it would naturally eat up and destroy the human body, including the bones: the bones found were those which would naturally be destroyed last. The digester had been thoroughly cleaned before the contents of the chip bin were emptied into it that day.

It is urged by the defendant that the facts stated are not sufficient evidence to justify a iinding that the plaintiff’s intestate was killed in the digester, and that the evidence as to the fork which he is supposed to have had tends to show that he probably left this bin in the way he entered it. Bottgar swears that the night following, twenty hours after the disappearance of the intestate, McKinnon, a superintendent of the defendant, sent me after the fork ; I found it on the top of the bin.” He swears it was the same fork the intestate had; that there was red paint upon it; that the handle was split somewhat, and that the next time it was used it broke off. The evidence is not entirely satisfactory about the fork. Two forks are at each bin, usually near the bottom of the stairs when not in use,, although sometimes a man leaving the bin leaves the fork on top of the bin at the place where Bottgar swears he found this fork. The evidence shows that two or three men were at the bin after the intestate; no one seems to have seen this fork on top of the bin until McKinnon sent Bo.ttgar after it. The evidence of one witness indicates that the forks were all alike and none of them had paint on them. The witnesses were all employees of the defendant and probably favorable to it. It may be that Bottgar was mistaken about the identity of the fork; it may be that Teeling in going into the bin was mistaken in saying that he did not take this fork with him. It is not quite clear whether Teeling took a fork which he had which came from some other place in the mill, or whether he took one of the regular forks belonging to this bin. It was a fair question for the jury what effect, if any, should be given to the testimony as to the fork. It was also a fair question for the jury to determine how much knowledge the intestate [114]*114acquired as to theihole in the bin, and the manner of its construction, while he was assisting in putting the hopper between the bin and the digester. There is no evidence suggesting any source from which the human teeth and bones could enter the digester except' as we may infer that they were the remains of the intestate. It does not appear that upon other occasions any like bones were ever found. The- disappearance of the intestate and the finding of the human teeth and patella in the digester is at least some evidence that the facts are related to each other and that -the intestate met his death there. The evidence of the defendant’s employees indicates that the slide between the chute and the digester was half closed. • That would reduce the open space to about twelve by twenty-three inches, and it was- a. fair question for the jury whether, if the opening was half closed, a man of the intestate’s form could and did pass through it. The intestate apparently had no knowledge of this bin except what he acquired while aiding in lifting on the hopper and such as.he gained by working in bin No. 4 where -the- opening at the bottom was not to exceed twelve inches square and which would not permit a thickset man about twenty-two inches across the shoulders to pass through.

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Related

Makoski v. Union Bag & Paper Co.
142 A.D. 915 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
136 A.D. 110, 120 N.Y.S. 517, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/makoski-v-union-bag-paper-co-nyappdiv-1909.