Orange Lumber Co. v. Ellis

150 S.W. 582, 105 Tex. 363, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 162
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 6, 1912
DocketNo. 2250.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 150 S.W. 582 (Orange Lumber Co. v. Ellis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orange Lumber Co. v. Ellis, 150 S.W. 582, 105 Tex. 363, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 162 (Tex. 1912).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Dibbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

This cause is before the Supreme Court upon Certified Questions as follows:

‘ ‘ This is an action by J. S. Ellis against the Orange Lumber Company to recover damages, laid at $15,000.00, for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him while operating a lath machine as a servant of defendant in its mill. A trial with a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for $5,500.00. Defendant filed its motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and it prosecutes this appeal.

“It is alleged in the petition that, while engaged in feeding slabs into the machine, a piece of a slab was thrown back with such force as to go through a board an inch and a quarter thick, behind which appellee was standing, and to strike him on the head and eye, so injuring the eye that it had to be removed, and fracturing his skull, and that his other eye was seriously and permanently impaired and injured. It was alleged that the machine at which appellee was working was unsafe and unfit for the purpose for which it was used, that it was old and worn and out of repair, was not bolted to the foundation and made steady; that the machine in carrying slabs through the saw was not protected by any sufficient covering to keep *366 splinters from being thrown back, and because the rollers through which the slabs pass after passing the saws were not fitted with teeth or spikes to hold the slab steady, but the teeth or spikes on the rollers provided for that purpose were permitted to be worn off or knocked off and were not replaced, and that the rollers on the machine had been taken off by defendant and replaced with others not suited for the purpose, that all of such defects were well known to defendant, and their existence due to its want of ordinary care, and were the sole cause of appellee’s injuries.

“Defendant answered by general denial and pleaded contributory negligence and assumed risk on the part of plaintiff, alleging that he was foreman in charge of the work of operating this machinery and charged with the duty of making such repairs as were necessary, and that he was entirely familiar with the working of the machine, knew all about the alleged defects, if in fact they existed, and the danger arising therefrom, if any, and that the accident was one of the risks voluntarily assumed by him.

“In the opinion heretofore rendered by us the following conclusions of fact are found:

“At the time of the accident appellee was in the employment of appellant, and was in charge of the work of operating the lath machine. He seemed to be a sort of foreman in this work, with authority to direct the other men engaged therein. At the time of the accident he was engaged in feeding slabs into the machine. There was a board one and a quarter inches thick placed across the machine just in front of him to protect the man feeding the machine from saw-dust, splinters, etc., liable to be thrown back by the operation of the saws. While engaged in feeding a slab into the machine, in some way not very clearly shown, a piece of the slab was broken off and got on top of the saw and was thrown back by the saw over the front rollers with such force as to go through the board and to strike appellee on the head and in the eye, injuring his head, and either entirely knocking out his eye, or so injuring it as to require the removal of the eye-ball:

“As the "facts in this regard are presented by the evidence, even with the assistance of such explanation as is given in the brief, we have not, and cannot present, a very clear and definite idea of the character of the machine, and of the exact cause of the accident, but the evidence sufficiently shows that it was due to some one or more of the defects in the machine alleged in the petition, and the evidence justifies the further conclusion that the accident was occasioned by the negligence of the appellant in some one or more of the particulars charged.

“The finding that appellee ‘seemed to be a sort of foreman in this work, with authority to direct the other men engaged therein’ we have concluded is inaccurate and should be substituted by the following, ‘ Appellee was the foreman in charge of the work, with authority to direct the other men engaged therein, and was a vice-principal as to the men under him, but it was a part of his duty, when the necessity therefor arose, to take part in the work as one of the operators of the machine, and at the time of the accident he *367 was so engaged in the performance of his duty, in feeding slabs into the machine, in the absence of the man who had been doing that work, but whose services were required in a different part of the work.’ As the negligence of the master, if any, consisted in furnishing a defective and unsafe machine, we do not deem it material whether or not appellee was a foreman and vice-principal, as we find that he was not responsible for the alleged defects in the machine.

“The judgment of the trial court was reversed by this court and the cause remanded for certain errors in the charge. Upon motion for rehearing by appellee it is insisted that we were in error as to our rulings on the charge, and by similar motion by appellant it is insisted that we were in error in remanding the cause, but that judgment should have been rendered for appellant, on the ground that the undisputed evidence showed that the accident, which caused the injury to appellee, was one of the risks assumed by him, and that we were in error in finding that the evidence was sufficient to require this issue to be submitted to the jury.

“We gather from the evidence, which is not at all clearly stated, however, that there were certain rollers in front of the saws, under which the slabs, intended to be sawed into laths, were pushed in the direction of the saws. The laths after passing the saws were intended to be caught by the rear-rollers, placed about 18 inches behind the saws, which caught the laths and pulled them through out of the way of the saws. It is contended by appellee that the top roller at the rear of the saws, as the machine was originally constructed, had been so made as to operate on each lath, catching it and securely holding it after it passed the saw, so that it could not in any way get caught by the revolving saws and thrown back over the front of the machine and injure the man who fed the slabs into the machine, as appellee was doing when he was injured, but that this arrangement for catching the laths after passing the saws, had been replaced, by the superintendent of the mill, by a solid roller which, on account of the inequalities of the surface of the slab, being high in the middle and lower on the sides, did not catch and hold securely the laths, after, passing the saws, in consequence of which pieces were sometimes caught on the revolving saws and thrown back over the front of the machine. To protect the man feeding the machine a board of sufficient width and 1% inches thick had been fixed in front of him, about the height of his head, to protect him from these flying pieces thrown back by the saw. This piece of plank was ‘jogged/ that is, indented by the action of splinters and small pieces so thrown against it. The board was so placed that it afforded a protection from such pieces thrown back unless one should penetrate the board, as was done in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
150 S.W. 582, 105 Tex. 363, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orange-lumber-co-v-ellis-tex-1912.