McClaren v. Weber Bros. Shoe Co.

166 F. 714, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 4300
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 19, 1909
DocketNo. 773
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 166 F. 714 (McClaren v. Weber Bros. Shoe Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClaren v. Weber Bros. Shoe Co., 166 F. 714, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 4300 (1st Cir. 1909).

Opinion

PUTNAM, Circuit Judge.

In this- case the plaintiff in the court of first instance is also the plaintiff in error. Therefore we will speak of the two parties as the plaintiff and the defendant. This suit arose out of the same injury by the same machine involved in the writ of error in McClaren v. United Shoe Machinery Company (No. 736) 166 Fed. 712, where an opinion was passed down simultaneously with this; and some matters herein are explained there. The essential difference is that Weber Bros. Shoe Company was the employer of the plaintiff, [716]*716using the machine leased by it from the United Shoe Machinery Company, as explained in the other suit. The case was tried to a jury, and the learned judge of the Circuit Court directed a verdict for the defendant, whereupon the plaintiff took out this writ of error.

The declaration contains three counts. The second and third counts were under the Massachusetts employers’ liability statutes, alleging defects in the defendant’s machinery and the negligence of the superintendent. The first count was at common law. Under the circumstances, the second count is immaterial; and, so far as the third count is concerned, the verdict was properly directed for the defendant, because, if there was any negligence, it was on the part of the corporation itself in furnishing a defective machine. The foreman, or superintendent, in charge of the machine and its repairs, seems to have been especially diligent in endeavoring to remedy the defects.

The other count shows that the machine was a stitching machine which the plaintiff was operating, and that, while so engaged, a needle broke and a piece thereof penetrated his eye. It states that the plaintiff was injured “by reason of the negligence of the defendant in providing and maintaining an insufficient, improper, defective, and dangerous machine.” It fails, however, to point out in what way the defective condition resulted in breaking the needle, or, in fact, that it did cause its breaking. With proper allegations on this point we would understand the case; and apply the testimony, with more facility than we now can. Nevertheless, the defendant seems to have been content with the pleadings, and we must work them out as best we can.

At the trial, the plaintiff claimed to have no knowledge himself of what caused the needle to break, this being a part of his major proposition that he had no reason to anticipate that it would bréale; but it seems to be -now claimed that the breaking was caused by the looseness of the looper-lever, together with the worn condition of the needle guide. A witness who was undoubtedly sufficiently expert in this matter, although he was only an experienced operator of similar machines, gave it as his opinion that it was caused by the striking of the needle by the loose looper-lever, in consequence of the worn condition of the guide, because the needle was not accurately directed, and so was allowed to strike in some other place than the hole which the awl provided for it; and that thus it was made to bind in coming back, so that it finally broke and flew off. This testimony was given in response to a hypothetical question, as to which the record states that it was answered under the defendant’s exception; but the ground of the exception-is not given. To our mind, the testimony was proper and relevant, and tended to supply what was lacking in the pleadings, and to show whether the breaking of the needle was caused by the defective condition of the machine. Therefore, we think there was enough to go to the jury on the proposition that this defective condition was the proximate cause of the injury.

The next questions are as follows: First, was there enough to go to the jury on the question whether there was negligence on the part of the defendant in reference to the defective condition of the machine? Second, was that defect of such a character that there was sufficient [717]*717io go to the jury on the question whether the injury to the plaintiff was a natural consequence thereof within the meaning of the law ? And, third, was the detect one as to which the defendant had reason to anticipate the possibilities to such an extent that it was bound to guard against them? So far as the first interrogatory is concerned, we are of the opinion that there was sufficient evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant to go to the jury. There was proof that the machine in question was made up of old parts of other machines. There was also proof that, after the plaintiff commenced working on it, it broke dowti twice, followed by attempted repairs made under the direction of the plaintiff’s foreman, -which repairs were followed in each case by another breaking down after running a very short time.

The testimony of the expert to which we have referred embraced, also, sufficient to require that the second and third interrogatories should be answered affirmatively. The jury might have inferred that, as the probabilities with regard to the effect of the defect in the mechanism were apparent to him, they were, therefore, also apparent to the defendant, eng'aged as it was in the business of operating many of these machines.

At this, point it is necessary to take up the story somewhat further. It appeared that, after the two attempts at putting the machine in order, the plaintiff told the defendant’s foreman that he would have to leave because he could not afford to hang around longer. Thereupon the foreman told him to wait; that he would have the machine put in order, “and that everything would be ‘O. K.’ ” Then there came a mechanic from the Goodyear Company, so called, by which was meant the corporation which constructed this class of machines, and, therefore, well to be assumed to- be fully competent to repair. The plaintiff testified that he, this mechanic, “overhauled the machine, and seemed to take a good deal of time upon it.” He worked on it all of one day and the morning of the next day. He then reported that it had a worn needle guide, and called the plaintiff’s attention to this fact; but, as the plaintiff further testified, he said: “It was all right if it didn’t give me any trouble; that most operators preferred a worn needle guide.” Nothing was said at this point about the loose looper-lever. The effect of this omission was for the jury. It is apparent that by this the Goodyear Company’s representative intended to assure the plaintiff that the machine was safe, although it might bother him.

The plaintiff further testified that he then resumed the use of the machine, but that it worked the same as previously, though not quite s.o badly. The next day the accident happened to his eye. It was plain from the needle itself that it broke off, net at the barb, but at the stock, having first been bent. There was also evidence that for the barbs of needles to break off was a common occurrence, but that for needles to break as this one broke — that is, at the stock — and to be bent, was a rare thing.

The plaintiff complains that some manufacturers use a guard to protect against the breaking of needles, while this machine had no guard; but he knew this. The Circuit Court was entitled to assume, and we must assume, that the plaintiff had sufficient experience to have [718]*718accepted the risk of so ordinary a thing as the breaking of the barb, which, independently of any evidence, and to any ordinary mind, might well have been expected to have occurred frequently. In the same way, that there was no guard the plaintiff knew, and this was so manifest that he must be assumed to have taken the risk of any ordinary break which a guard would have provided against.

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Bluebook (online)
166 F. 714, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 4300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclaren-v-weber-bros-shoe-co-ca1-1909.