Merritt v. Victoria Lumber Co.

35 So. 497, 111 La. 159, 1903 La. LEXIS 513
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 15, 1903
DocketNo. 14,295
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 35 So. 497 (Merritt v. Victoria Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merritt v. Victoria Lumber Co., 35 So. 497, 111 La. 159, 1903 La. LEXIS 513 (La. 1903).

Opinions

BLANCHARD, J.

Plaintiff sues in her own right as surviving widow, and as natural tutrix of her minor children, claiming damages for the loss of the husband and father, who was killed at defendant’s mill by a piece of timber violently thrown by a rip-saw.

She charges his death to defendant’s fault and negligence in not providing (1) safe machinery and keeping it in safe condition; (2) in not operating the rip-saw so as to minimize the danger incident to its operation; (3) in employing careless and negligent operators.

The answer of the defendant is that plaintiff’s husband’s death was purely an accident, not caused by any defect of machinery, nor yet by the fault or negligence of any one in its employ; but if occasioned by the neglect of any of its employees they were fellow servants of plaintiff’s husband, and for their negligence defendant is not liable.

The case was tried by jury whose verdict was in favor of the plaintiff, awarding her twenty-five hundred dollars in her own right, and the like sum to her minor children.

Defendant appeals.

Ruling— The work the deceased was employed to do at the mill was to keep the floor and passage-way of the workshop clear of trash or pieces of timber. It was his duty to gather up the stray and loose pieces of lumber that might be lying in disorder on the floor, keeping them out of the way of the machinery and of the workmen.

He was engaged in performing this duty when struck and killed by the piece of timber thrown by the rip-saw.

He had no connection with the operation of the saw itself, nor was his sphere of duty confined to the locality immediately at and around the saw.

[161]*161The rip-saw was operated by two men, one called “the feeder,” the other, “the off-bearer.” They were, at the time of the casualty, handling pieces of timber two feet long by about five inches square. Out of these they were sawing or ripping smaller pieces for balustrades, two inches square by two feet long.

The rip-saw is a machine consisting of a cast iron table, thirty by forty-two inches, in the center of which, running in a slit, is a small circular saw.

The table is movable—it can be raised up or down. The saw is stationary. There are fitted to and on the surface of the table what are called “guides,” to guide the timber as it is being put through the saw. Their object is to so adjust the timber and hold it to the saw that each piece sawed or ripped out of it is of the same width.

The saw fitted in the slit revolves towards “the feeder” with incredible swiftness and power.

The feeder stands in front of the machine and adjusting the timber to the guides and saw, pushes it against the saw. As the saw passes through it “the off-bearer’s” duty is to take the pieces, throwing to one side the. smaller piece intended for balustrade purposes, and returning the larger piece to “the feeder” to be again passed through the saw.

At the time the deceased met his death “the feeder” had so adjusted the movable table to the saw that the latter could cut the depth of only half of the stick of timber he was feeding to it. He had passed the piece once through the saw and it had been returned to . him by “the off-bearer.” “The feeder,” turning it on the side, then passed it through the saw a second time. This severed from the larger piece one quarter of its size, or a piece (say) two inches thick by two feet long, intended to be worked up into a balustrade.

The position of the two pieces at the instant the saw emerged the second time was, the larger piece, now three quarters of its former size, was on top of the smaller piece two inches square.

It seems “the off-bearer” was slow to catch the pieces, and “the feeder,” not yet having loosened his hold, himself drew back the larger piece and in doing so the smaller cube, detached but still under the larger piece, was drawn against the teeth of the saw, was caught by the teeth and hurled with great velocity back towards the front of the machine where Stevens, the feeder, was standing.

Just at that moment Merritt, the deceased, was in a stooping position, discharging his duties, just back of the front of the machine, only a few feet from Stevens. The flying piece of timber grazed Stevens’ arm and struck Merritt with full force on the side of the head at the temple, crushing his skull. After lingering a few hours he died, never recovering consciousness.

He was forty-three years of age. His wages at the time were a dollar a day. He left a widow and eight children, seven of whom were minors—the youngest two years old.

He owned little or nothing in the way of property. The family were supported by his earnings; were dependent on him.

It is shown that, according to life insurance tables, his' expectancy of continued life was twenty-six years.

The contention of the plaintiff is that the machine, at the time her husband was killed, was dangerously defective in that it was without what is called a “guard,” or “spreader”; that if this guard had been upon it and in place the accident could not have happened; that the object and purpose of this guard is to keep the pieces of timber, sawn through by the saw, from coming in contact with the teeth of the saw and hurled back, to the detriment of those standing at the front of the machine.

This guard consists of a small piece of steel fastened in the slit in which the saw revolves, and adjusted just behind the saw. It is placed as near the saw as can be without incurring the danger of the saw striking it.

Sometimes these guards come with-the machine when purchased from the factory; sometimes they do not and are supplied (made) bj’’ the people who run the machine. They are safety devices.

It is shown that other rip-saws in defendant’s establishment were fitted with guards, and that the one in question had a guard put on it, the day before Merritt was killed, by [163]*163the foreman of the shop, but the same had, the day of the casualty, been removed by Stevens, “the feeder” of the machine.

The contention of the defendant is that guards are not in general use on rip-saws; that a machine of that character is not defective because it is not supplied with one; that the factories manufacturing rip-saw machines do not fit them up with guards.

The evidence satisfied the jury, as it does us, that a rip-saw of the character of the one that killed Merritt, to be safe should be equipped with a guard, and that Merritt would not have been killed had there been a guard on the machine.

The jury were taken to the mill, saw it operated, and became convinced (all save two who dissented) that it was dangerous to operate such a machine in the kind of work then being done without its being provided with a guard.

It was the company’s duty to see that this safety device was supplied and kept in position. The master is required to take reasonable precautions to secure the safety of his servants. A servant has the right to look to the master for the discharge of that duty.

In this instance the company had provided no guard to be attached to the rip-saw. True it is the foreman of that department of the mill had, the day before, improvised a guard and fitted it in place on the machine. This may be taken as the act of the master—the foreman standing in his stead.

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Bluebook (online)
35 So. 497, 111 La. 159, 1903 La. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merritt-v-victoria-lumber-co-la-1903.