Mueller v. LaPrelle Shoe Co.

84 S.W. 1010, 109 Mo. App. 506, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 13
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 24, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 84 S.W. 1010 (Mueller v. LaPrelle Shoe Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mueller v. LaPrelle Shoe Co., 84 S.W. 1010, 109 Mo. App. 506, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 13 (Mo. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

Personal injury case. At the time plaintiff was hurt he was a minor past eighteen years of age and working in the defendant’s shoe factory. He was employed in that factory July 23,1903, and injured on the thirteenth day of the following October; but had worked on the machine that hurt him less than three days before the accident. That machine was for pressing leather. It had two iron rollers, one placed above the other and rolling inwardly, which took hold of pieces of leather fed to them by hand and drew the pieces through, thus smoothing their surfaces. A horizontal table was immediately in front of the two rollers with its inner edge opposite the space between them. Beneath the platform was a coiled spring about a foot in length, and projecting from the lower end of the spring was a bent arm which ended in a flat treadle a foot long and eight inches wide, set nearly horizontally, to be worked by the foot of the operator of the machine. This treadle was intersected by deep grooves a quarter of an inch apart, cut into the upper surface to roughen [510]*510it and give the operator a better foothold. The rollers were turned by a belt working on a wheel at the side and on shafting above, driven by steam power. In operating the machine the workman would put his foot on the treadle, press it downward and thereby raise the lower' roller so that the leather was drawn between the two rollers and pressed. "When the workman removed his foot the lower roller would drop. The accident was due to the plaintiff’s foot slipping off the treadle, causing him to lose his balance, tilt forward and thrust his hand between the rollers, which crushed it.

The only ground for a verdict in plaintiff’s favor allowed by the instructions was a finding that the condition of the treadle rendered it dangerous to work with, that such condition was known to the defendant, or could have been by care, and that the danger was not known and appreciated by plaintiff, or if known and appreciated, was not so imminent and immediate as under the circumstances in evidence, would deter an ordinarily prudent person of plaintiff’s years and experience from operating the machine. The treadle was said to be in bad order and dangerous, because its surface had been worn so slick by use that the operator’s foot would slip off, thus endangering him. The plaintiff said the top of the treadle “was a good deal worn off and slippery.” He had seen the machine at work several months before he was put to work on it and testified that he knew all about operating it, as doubtless he did, for it was of simple construction and movement, and required hut little study to understand. He said that before the day of the accident, which was the third day he worked on the machine, his foot slipped off the treadle five times or more; twice the first day and three times the second. He said, too, that he knew there was danger of his foot slipping off because of the smoothness of the treadle, and danger of his hand getting caught between the rollers as the result of such a slip; that he knew all those matters after he had tended the [511]*511machine two days as well as if he had worked on it two weeks. And his evidence leaves no doubt that prior to the injury he not only comprehended the imperfect state of the treadle, but the danger to which it exposed him. He testified to using pieces of bagging and leather on the treadle to make his foothold more secure, and to a conversation with the foreman, which was relied on to prove notice to the defendant that the treadle was in bad repair. The plaintiff’s testimony regarding that matter is that the foreman, seeing a piece of crumpled leather on the floor, spoke to the plaintiff about it and plaintiff told him he had used it on the treadle to keep his foot from slipping; whereupon the foreman said the leather was not there for that purpose. The foreman said he had never thought of the appliance as out of repair and had received no information from any one that it was. He deniedhavinghad any conversation with the plaintiff about it. A man who had worked on the machine previously testified that he experienced no difficulty ; that the treadle was in good order and his foot had never slipped. An expert on shoe machines swore a machine of this kind was expected to last ten years or more, that the treadle lasted as long as the rest of the machine, and that new treadles had never been supplied for pressing machines, or needed. The machine in question was placed in the factory in January, 1902, less than two years prior to the accident. A picture of it was put in evidence, which shows deep grooves across the surface of the treadle.

A point is made about the petition in this case in regard to the admission of testimony, so it is necessary to state the negligence charged, and this will best be done by copying from the petition itself:

“Plaintiff further says that said defendant wholly failed and neglected to perform the duties which, as master, it owed to said plaintiff while engaged in its employment as aforesaid, and that defendant’s said negligence consisted in this, to-wit': That when plain[512]*512tiff’s work was changed as aforesaid, he was not properly instructed as to the operation of the machine at which, as aforesaid, he was newly placed to work; and that defendant failed to give plaintiff such instruction and warning with reference to the dangers of said machine as, in the exercise of reasonable care, defendant should, under the circumstances stated aforesaid, have ■given to a person of plaintiff’s youthfulness and inexperience ; and in this, to-wit; that said machine at which plaintiff was last placed to work, as aforesaid, was not in a reasonably safe condition; and also in this, to-wit; that such fenders and safeguards were not provided for and attached to said machine as defendant, in the exercise of reasonable care, should have provided for screening and protecting the gearing and shafting of said machine at which it employed a person of plaintiff’s youthfulness and inexperience.
“As a direct result of the premises and of defendant’s negligence as aforesaid, on or about the 13th day of October, 1903, while plaintiff was engaged in the performance of his aforesaid duties and work at and about said machine, used for pressing and smoothing leather, as aforesaid, plaintiff slipped and fell and his left hand and arm were caught between the iron rollers of said machine and his said arm and hand terribly crushed, bruised, torn and lacerated.”

A verdict for the plaintiff was returned and the defendant appealed.

•No attempt was made to show that the machine by which the plaintiff was injured ought to have been screened or guarded, and the cause of action based on failure to safeguard it was abandoned practically, if not formally.

The plaintiff needed no instruction regarding the operation of the machine, as he already possessed full knowledge of how to operate it, and so testified. The mode of working it was very simple and could be as well understood by a brief observation as a long one. [513]*513The plaintiff had seen it operated through several months. Besides, his injury was not caused by lack of knowledge of how to operate the machine and is not asserted to have been. No ground of recovery was left except the imperfect state of the treadle, due to its slick surface, pn which the foot of the plaintiff slipped; and this was the only ground on which the instructions authorized a verdict for the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 S.W. 1010, 109 Mo. App. 506, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mueller-v-laprelle-shoe-co-moctapp-1905.