Mika v. Passaic Print Works

76 N.J.L. 561
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 23, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 76 N.J.L. 561 (Mika v. Passaic Print Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mika v. Passaic Print Works, 76 N.J.L. 561 (N.J. 1908).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Vkooja, J.

The action was for injuries received by the plaintiff while employed in the factory of the defendant at Passaic, New Jersey. He was working at a machine called a calender machine, and which is used to stretch, press and finish cloth.

A model of the machine and photographs of the same were offered in evidence and showed that the machine consisted of three cylinders, placed one above the other, and a stretcher, which is another cylinder placed in front of the other three. The cylinder known as the stretcher has staves upon it designed to stretch the width of the cloth as it passes over the stretcher. The staves of the stretcher are made of metal and are corrugated. They slide backward and forward along the horizontal length of the stretcher as the stretcher revolves. The cloth is caught by this backward and forward motion of the staves as it revolves about the stretcher and its width is stretched in that way. After leaving the stretcher the cloth passes between the two lower cylinders in the rear and revolves round the rear of the middle cylinder and then around the top [563]*563cylinder, from which it is wound onto a .roll in the rear of the machine.

The duties of the plaintiff were simply to attend to the cloth as it ran through the machine. It was shown that the cloth was delivered to the machine in rolls, the plaintiff was to adjust the roll in place, and when its contents had run through the calender, to adjust another. It was also his duty to watch the cloth as it passed through the machine. As the plaintiff himself said, “I was to watch that this cloth should go in there straight, that it should not turn.”

On the day of the accident the plaintiff further says that he was straightening out the cloth because he saw a double edge coming and that he “was trying to rectify the double edge from the bottom underneath the cloth.” His hand was caught between the cylinder with the staves, called the stretcher, and the next cylinder. It appeared that the cylinders revolved with great rapidity, one witness saying they were liable to go round twenty-five times a minute.

The plaintiff claimed that he had been put to work on this calender machine without any instruction, and that he had never worked a calender machine before, although he had been for some time employed about the factory. When told to work on the machine by the second boss, plaintiff says he told him that he did not know how to work on a calender, and the reply was that if he didn’t want to do that kind of work he could go home. The accident occurred on the third day he was working on the calender machine.

At the close of the plaintiff’s case a motion for nonsuit was made and granted, the learned trial judge saying, in part: “I ■do not see how any person can successfully contend that the injury which this man suffered was not the result of an ■obvious risk. If he had been feeding this cloth on two rollers it required no one to tell him that if he let his fingers come in contact with those rollers he would get hurt. How he was not exactly feeding the cloth on the rolls, but he was undertaking to smooth the edges of a rapidly moving cloth drawn at a great tension over this stretcher; he began with his hands ■within fourteen or fifteen inches, certainly, of the place of con[564]*564tact where the danger was apparent, his hand could be drawn there in a second of time; it was a dangerous occupation of course; he saw the speed at which the cylinder was revolving; it may be said that he was told to do this work or leave; that is no excuse; he had the right to exercise the option to leave or to stay on. * * * I think it was an obvious risk, and the motion on that ground should be granted.”

The only assignment of error seriously relied upon by the plaintiff in error, and requiring consideration here, is to the granting of the nonsuit at the close of plaintiff’s case.

The evidence discloses that at the trial no attempt was made to establish any of the charges made in the declaration, excepting (1) that the plaintiff was inexperienced and was put to work upon the machine without any instructions or warning, and (2) that the presses and rollers were unguarded, contrary to the statute in such case made and provided.

The case presented here is not, in my opinion, one where the injury to the plaintiff can be imputed to any neglect of the master in not instructing him as to the operation of this machine. Even should it be assumed that the master failed in the performance of his duty in not instructing him as to its operation, I do not see that the injury was due to any such neglect. As was said in Foley v. Jersey City Electric Co., 25 Vroom 414: “The servant and the master had equal means of forming a correct judgment. Therefore whatever want of prudence is chargeable to the one must 'be imputed to the other.” The danger here which was to be apprehended, that of having the hand caught between the rol-ls, was a perfectly obvious one, and as readily discernible by the servant as by the master. It is unnecessary further to enlarge upon or discuss the rule laid down in this court in Coyle v. Griffing Iron Co., 34 Id. 612, that “the servant assumes all the risks and perils usually incident to the emplojnnent, and included in such risks and perils are those which it is a part of his duty to take knowledge of by observation.” Chandler v. Coast Electric Railway Co., 32 Id. 380; Johnson v. Devoe Snuff Co., 33 Id. 417; Tompkins v. Engine Co., 41 Id. 330.

The case on the brief of defendant, Rooney v. Sewall, &c., [565]*565Cordage Co., 161 Mass. 153, is instructive and decisive as to this point. Justice Knowlton there said: “When the plaintiff entered the defendant’s service he impliedly agreed to assume all the obvious risks of the business, including the risk of injury from the kind of machinery then openly used. It is not material whether he examined the machinery before making the contract or not. He could look at it if he chose, or he could say, ‘1 do not care to examine it; I will agree to work in this mill and I am willing to take my risk in regard to that.5 In either case he would be held to contract in reference to the arrangement and kind of machinery then in use by his empolyer, so far as these things were open and obvious, so that they could readily be ascertained by such examination and inquiry as one would be expected to make if he wished to know the nature and perils of the service in which he was about to engage.55

As was insisted upon the argument, there is a very marked distinction between the danger which is incident to the operation of a machine in its normal condition. and a danger which is incidental to it by reason of some defect in the machine. In the ease before us the evidence clearly indicates that the danger of catching hold of the cloth as it was taken hold of by the plaintiff was a danger incident to the machine in its ordinary and normal operation, and was such an obvious danger that there can be no escape from the conclusion that it was one of the ordinary risks which had been assumed by the plaintiff.

The remaining question in the case was that raised by the averment in the declaration that the presses and rollers were unguarded and unprotected contrary to the statute in such case made and provided.

The reference was to the act of 1904 (Pamph. L., p.

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Related

Trecartin v. Mahony-Troast Construction Co.
87 A.2d 349 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 N.J.L. 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mika-v-passaic-print-works-nj-1908.