Newell v. Rahn

64 Ill. App. 249, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 889
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 14, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 64 Ill. App. 249 (Newell v. Rahn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newell v. Rahn, 64 Ill. App. 249, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 889 (Ill. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action brought by the administrator of the estate of a deceased person to recover damages for the death of such person, produced, as alleged, by the negligence of the appellant.

The deceased was fifteen years old ivhen the accident occurred, and had worked for appellant for sixteen months, in his organ factory.

On the day that the deceased received the injuries from which he shortly died he worked at a small planing machine, which he fed with boards about three feet long, one inch thick, and from four and a quarter to seven and a quarter inches wide. That machine seems to have been operated by two belts, one known as the driving belt, which operated the planer proper, and the other a shorter belt known as the feed belt, which operated the feeder. The driving belt descended to the machine from a pulley near the ceiling of the room, and the feed belt, which was only about seven feet in full length, reached from one pulley to another, both upon different parts of the machine as an entirety.

Ho witness saw the deceased at the moment of the accident, and it is matter of conjecture only as to just how it happened.

The theory of the appellee is that while the deceased was at his work and in the exercise of due care for his safety, the feed belt flew off and hit him the blow that caused his death.

As we read the evidence, this theory is not supported by the facts.

The feed belt, it is true, was off and lying upon the floor not far from the body of the deceased, when, the moment after a crack like a sharp report was heard, which attracted the attention of other workmen, the deceased was first seen injured and lying upon the floor.

There were only two witnesses, one for the appellee and one for the appellant, who saw the deceased and the belt a sufficiently short time before the accident to be able to testify concerning the situation in a manner at all helpful to an elucidation of the real fact of how the accident occurred.

The witness Josephson, for the appellee, testified upon direct examination that when the deceased got hurt there was a noise; that he looked around and then ran up to where the deceased was lying; that he did not see the deceased working at the machine “ just before he got hurt, before I (the witness) heard the noise. The machine stopped, and then I looked out of the window, and when I was looking there I heard the noise, and I looked around and he was lying there.”

Q. “ About how many minutes was that in between ? ” A. “ About one or two.”

Upon cross-examination this witness testified that when the deceased was at work feeding the machine he stood upon its south side, and that he, the witness, stood on the opposite side of the machine taking out the boards.

The witness was then asked concerning the belt, and the questions and his answers were as follows:

“Q. Did it hurt anybody when it came off? A. Hot that I know of.
Q. Were you there when it came off ? A. Yes, sir.
Q. You didn’t see anybody hurt there by that belt ? A.
Ho, sir.
Q. After the belt came off it stopped the machine ? A.
Yes, sir.
Q. You walked over to the window and looked out?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Do you know where William Eahn was standing when you went to the window ? A. He was standing in the same place that I went round.
Q. That is here (indicating), this feeding place? A.
Yes, sir.
Q. Then when you looked around you heard a crash ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. When you looked around where did you see William Eahn ? A. He was lying on the east side of the machine, a little north.
Q. A little north of the east side of the machine ? A.
Yes, sir.”

It would therefore appear that by appellee’s own witness it was proved that the belt in question had come off before the witness had gone to the window, and before the deceased was hurt.

But if there were any doubt about it, there can, we think, be none when we consider, also, the testimony of the witness Phillips, for the appellant. He was working at a machine known as a jointer, a few feet removed from the planer, and testified that he saw the deceased a few seconds before the accident happened. He was questioned, and answered as follows:

“ Q. Do you know what he was doing there ? A. When I seen him ?
Q. Yes. A. He had a stick in his hand, and was playing with that belt that runs up, when I seen him.
Q. What do you call that belt that runs up ? A. That is the driving belt.
Q. How long was that before the accident took place ?
A. Only a few seconds.
Q. What was the position of your body toward him ? Was your back to him or was your face to him ? A. When I saw him doing that I was facing him.
Q. Describe to the jury what he was doing. Was the machine running? A. The machine was running at that time. He got a stick and was touching it up.
Q. Was the lower belt there, the feed belt, on? A. The lower belt was off.
Q. The lower part of the machine, then, was not running ? A. The feed part.
Q. You say he was tapping? A. Yes.
Q. What was he tapping with ? A. He had got a board, or stick, I call it, somewhere between two and three inches wide, and was tapping it as it was running.
Q. Let me ask you if this stick (exhibiting a stick) is anything like the stick that he had ? A. It is similar to that. It might have been a little bit—not quite so wide probably; I didn’t measure it. That is similar to the stick.
Q. How, can you show the jury about how he was tapping that belt when you saw him? A. A hitting the belt this way, and tapping it up; the driving belt, that was running when T seen him. I turned around, and when I turned around he was doing that: ■ When I turned around and had my face to him, he put the stick down like that, and he stood in a position looking down on the floor. The belt was on the floor; the little belt.
Q. That is, this side belt here? A. Yes; that is the feed belt. I turned around to go to my work again, and that was the last I seén him before he was hurt.

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Bluebook (online)
64 Ill. App. 249, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newell-v-rahn-illappct-1896.