Odabashian v. Apsley Rubber Co.

100 N.E. 1081, 214 Mass. 66, 1913 Mass. LEXIS 1422
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 100 N.E. 1081 (Odabashian v. Apsley Rubber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Odabashian v. Apsley Rubber Co., 100 N.E. 1081, 214 Mass. 66, 1913 Mass. LEXIS 1422 (Mass. 1913).

Opinion

Sheldon, J.

This bill of exceptions is needlessly voluminous. Much of the evidence is set forth by question and answer, when it readily might have been put in narrative form.

The jury were warranted in finding that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care and had not made a contractual assumption of the risk of what happened. Doubtless the risk of one’s hand being drawn into the revolving rollers of a machine is ordinarily obvious, but the special risk of this result following from the hands being caught in an adhesive substance not known to be 1 such is not necessarily so. There are open only the issues raised by the sixth count of the plaintiff’s declaration, upon which the verdict in his favor was found; and we must now take it that adequate and correct instructions were given to the jury upon this count, if it was properly submitted to them at all.

The plaintiff’s injury, as has been found, was due to his hand being drawn by the hot and sticky rubber upon which he was at work between the rolls of a machine called a “ cracker.” That condition of the rubber was caused by the heating of the rolls; but for this alone he cannot recover, because it was caused by the act of a fellow workman. But there was evidence that both white, red and black rubber were intended to be run through the “cracker,” and that different degrees of heat were required to be applied to the rollers for these different kinds of rubber, the white rubber requiring the highest temperature and the black the lowest, but that the plaintiff did not know this and was ignorant of the greater danger involved by the greater heat required when some kinds of rubber were used, and the increased risk of the rubber [69]*69becoming so hot and sticky that he could not extricate his hands therefrom before they reached the rolls. The heat was applied to the rollers by means of steam, and this was done by another workman; and the plaintiff, as he testified, knew nothing about this, and never knew or feared that the rolls might get so hot as to create the danger spoken of.

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Related

Ponta v. New Bedford Cordage Co.
106 N.E. 1004 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1914)
Cornell-Andrews Smelting Co. v. Boston & Providence Railroad
215 Mass. 381 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 N.E. 1081, 214 Mass. 66, 1913 Mass. LEXIS 1422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odabashian-v-apsley-rubber-co-mass-1913.