McBeth-Evans Glass Co. v. Brunson

122 N.E. 439, 70 Ind. App. 513, 1919 Ind. App. LEXIS 53
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 13, 1919
DocketNo. 9,764
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 122 N.E. 439 (McBeth-Evans Glass Co. v. Brunson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McBeth-Evans Glass Co. v. Brunson, 122 N.E. 439, 70 Ind. App. 513, 1919 Ind. App. LEXIS 53 (Ind. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Enloe, J.

The complaint upon which this case was tried consisted of two paragraphs. To each of said [515]*515paragraphs separate demurrers were addressed for want of facts. The demurrers were overruled.

The errors assigned are: First, the overruling of the demurrer to the first paragraph of complaint. Second, the overruling of the demurrer to the second paragraph of complaint. Third, the overruling of the appellant’s motion for a new trial.

1. The first paragraph of complaint is quite lengthy, but the material averments therein contained are: That defendant is a corporation, engaged in operating a glass factory at Elwood, Indiana, and has been so engaged for fifteen or twenty years, manufacturing lamp chimneys and other glass products; that it owns its own factory building and grounds, and employs from 100 to 300 men, in the various departments of its factory, in the operation thereof; that plaintiff entered the employ of said defendant some years ago, working first as a gatherer of molten glass, and later as a glass-blower, working-in the blowing room; that adjacent to the blowing-room defendant maintained a room known as a mixing room, where it mixed products, used in the manufacture of glass, in large troughs; that among the poisonous substances so there mixed were suboxide of copper, oxide of tin, white sand, pearl ash, saltpeter, arsenic, magnesia, soda-ash, lime, carbonate of soda, nitre, charcoal, lead and pearl ashes, which said substances were, during all of said time, mixed dry; that all of said substances were injurious to human being's who came in contact with them, and especially to the eyes of such persons.

That from the mixing of said poisonous substances in a dry and powdery state there arose a cloud of dust, which, if not confined and prevented from blowing [516]*516from said mixing room into the other departments of said factory, wonld permeate the atmosphere in other parts of said factory; that said dust was deleterious to health, and liable to injure the eyes and eyesight of human beings who were compelled to work in the air so permeated therewith.

That it was defendant’s duty to confine said poisonous dust in said mixing room, and prevent the same from entering-the other departments of said factory, and to protect, its workmen from said dust, and keep the dust from said poisonous chemicals from entering the eyes and lungs of such employes; that the dele.terious and injurious effect of the dust upon the eyes of human beings was well known to defendant at all times.

That between September, 1912, and June, 1914, plaintiff worked from time to time as a blower in the blowing room, and during said time his eyes and his eyesight became affected and injured from the dust permeating the air and atmosphere in the blowing-room, coming from the mixing room, where said chemicals were so mixed; that he did not know said dust was injuring- his eyes, or eyesight, or that it would injure them, until since he' ceased work in June, 1914, but defendant did at all times know that the dust from said poisons, coming in contact with the eyes of its workmen, would injure them and destroy tlie sight thereof.

That said defendant could have prevented the employes from coming in contact with said poisonous dust, and avoided any injury to its employes and plaintiff therefrom, had said defendant kept the mixing room tightly closed and allowed no cracks or openings therein; that the defendant negligently and [517]*517carelessly allowed the partition between the blowing room and the mixing room to remain loose and open, with large cracks in the same, so that dust and fumes from the mixing room escaped through the same into said blowing room and permeated the air therein, and blew into plaintiff’s face and eyes, while he was working therein blowing glass; that there were doors in said mixing room for the purpose of keeping the same closed, but said defendant, during all of said time negligently allowed-and permitted said doors to be open, and said dust to escape through the same into the blowing room; that defendant during all of said time negligently suffered and permitted the partition shutting off the mixing room to he loose and insecure, and allowed large cracks and openings to remain in same, so that the same was at all times open and permitted the dust from said troughs and said poisonous chemicals to escape from the mixing room through said openings and through said doors into the blowing room, and into the plaintiff’s face and eyes, thereby injuring his eyes and eyesight.

That plaintiff was engaged in blowing glass in said department of defendant’s factory, and did not appreciate or know the danger thereof, and did not realize or know that his eyes were being injured from the poisonous air until the injury was done, his eyesight affected, and his general health impaired; that he has not worked in said factory since acquiring such knowledge.

That the said poisonous dust which so escaped through said faulty-and negligently constructed walls of the mixing room into said blowing room, and into the face and eyes of plaintiff, did injure his general health and his eyes and eyesight and cause cataracts [518]*518to form over the pupils of his eyes so that his eyesight was seriously impaired, and he could not see to get about to work, and was compelled to quit work and go to an oculist for treatment for his eyes, at large expense; that he has been rendered practically blind, and his eyes and eyesight have been so injured that they cannot be cured; that his eyes before said time were in good condition, and he could see well to work and get about, and was able to earn three dollars, or more, per day.

That, by reason of the negligence of defendant in allowing the doors between said blowing room and said mixing.room to be and remain open, and in allowing many large cracks and openings to remain in the wall, so as to permit said poisonous dust from said chemicals, while being so mixed therein, to escape from said mixing room into said blowing room, where plaintiff worked, the place where plaintiff worked was rendered unsafe and dangerous to him, all of which .could have been avoided by the use of ordinary care and diligence on the part of said defendant.

The plaintiff had worked for defendant from time to time since 1905, working first as a gatherer and afterwards as a blower; that he worked in said blowing room in 1912, and to the early part of 1913, as a blower, when, on account of general bad health, he laid off until, the autumn of 1913, when he again began working for defendant, and thereafter worked part of the time as a gatherer, and part of the time as a blower, as directed by defendant, in said blowing room; that defendant knew all the time, and could have known by the use of ordinary care, of all of said conditions herein alleged, and of said dangers to plaintiff from said gases, dust and fumes; that said [519]*519poisonous gases, dust and fumes work upon one exposed thereto in an insidious manner, and give no warning to the person exposed by causing any pain, and one unacquainted with the facts as to the action of this poison would not know of the injury being done him until it was done; that plaintiff was ignorant of the danger of said gases, fumes and dust, and had no notice or knowledge that it was from that source that his general health had become impaired and his eyes injured.

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Bluebook (online)
122 N.E. 439, 70 Ind. App. 513, 1919 Ind. App. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbeth-evans-glass-co-v-brunson-indctapp-1919.