Phillips v. Romona Oolitic Stone Co.

49 N.E. 467, 19 Ind. App. 341, 1898 Ind. App. LEXIS 39
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 23, 1898
DocketNo. 2,371
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 49 N.E. 467 (Phillips v. Romona Oolitic Stone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Romona Oolitic Stone Co., 49 N.E. 467, 19 Ind. App. 341, 1898 Ind. App. LEXIS 39 (Ind. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Black, J.

— The appellant brought his action against the appellee to recover damages for a personal injury suffered by the appellant while assisting as an employe of the appellee in the operation of a machine [342]*342for dressing stone. In the course of the working of the machine, called a “planer,” a certain part thereof, called the cross-head, was occasionally raised or lowered by means of two belts. The belts passed over a large wooden pulley, which was above the machine and upon a shaft which was run by a steam engine. The belts also passed around another smaller metallic pulley attached to the planer by a counter-shaft, being a fixed or tight pulley. On either side of this fixed or tight pulley, and on said counter-shaft, was a loose pulley called an “idler.” The belts, when not being used for raising or lowering the cross-head, ran upon the idlers. One was a straight belt, and the other a crossed belt; the former being used for raising, the latter for lowering the cross-head. The counter-shaft, with its three pulleys side by side, extended from east to west. The straight belt, when not in use for raising the cross-head, ran upon the west pulley, or idler, and the crossed belt, when not in use 'for lowering the cross-head, ran upon the east idler. When it was desired to raise or lower the cross-head, to do which required about five minutes, the belt so used for such purpose was shifted from its idler to the central fixed or tight pulley by means of a part of the machine called a “shifter.” Said central pulley and the idlers were each twelve inches in diameter.

There was a special verdict, in the form of interrogatories and the answers thereto, upon which the court rendered judgment for the áppellee. This action of the trial court is presented for review.

The facts found, so far as they need be particularly stated for the decision of the case, were, in addition to those condensed above, substantially as follows: The planer had been in use more than six months prior to appellant’s injury. When kept in proper repair, the belts, pulleys, and shifters performed their [343]*343several functions perfectly, and the work of operating the planer was not dangerous to the employes, and the belts and pulleys raised and lowered the cross-head without assistance from the employes, and it was not necessary to press upon the belts in order to make them perform their functions. The appellant when injured had been assisting in the operation of the planer for some weeks. When he was placed to work on the planer as a helper, the belts, pulleys, and shifters were not in such condition as that they performed their functions-of raising and lowering the cross-head, but it was necessary to press upon the belts in order to assist them in raising and lowering the cross-head. It was also found that, while the appellant was at work upon the planer, the belts, pulleys, and shifters got in such condition that they would not raise or lower the cross-head without pressure on the belts. When thé machine got in such condition that it would not raise or lower the cross-head, the appellant was required by the appellee to aid the same by pressing upon said belts with an iron rod in his hands, the place where he was required to stand and press upon the belts with a rod being eight or ten feet above the ground, and upon the top of the cross-head or arch, on a space eight or ten inches in width, in front of and over said belts and pulleys. It was found that, while pressing upon the belts, with said rod, his body was unsupported except as it was sustained by the pressure upon the belt. The place where he was required to stand upon the planer and press upon the belt while it was in motion was one that was dangerous and unsafe to his person, the danger consisting of his liability to fall or be thrown into the belts and pulleys, while putting said pressure upon said belts. He protested to his foreman, stated by the jury to be his fellow servant, and to the superintendent, [344]*344against going upon the planer and pressing upon the' belts when ordered to do so. He. complained about the belts being loose. It was found that the appellee, by said foreman and superintendent, as late as two or three days before appellant was injured, promised him that the hoisting and lowering machinery of the cross-head should be fixed so that it would be unnecessary to apply pressure on the belts; that it was promised him by an officer or representative of the appellee that the belts should be tightened; and that he was promised by the appellee that it would get a man from Bedford to take his place as such helper and would restore him to his place as a stonecutter, and away from the planer; it being found also that he had worked at the establishment as a stonecutter before he was” placed to work on the planer. The promise to get a helper from Bedford was renewed until the day of the injury. The promise to tighten the belt was last made three days before the injury. After talking the matter over, the officers and representatives of the appellee decided, before the injury, that they would run the belt by which he was hurt, without tightening it or otherwise changing it. To the following interrogatory the jury answered in the negative: “Did the plaintiff know before his injury, and at that time, that those representing the defendant had decided to run the belt for an indefinite time without changing dr tightening it, on account of certain disadvantages in running it tighter than it was?” The appellant’s foreman and the appellee’s superintendent, in appellant’s presence, at what time is not stated, went upon the planer, and with an iron rod, or piece of wood, applied pressure to the belt, as appellant was required to do when he was injured. These facts, viz., the promise soon to get the helper from Bedford and restore appellant to his place [345]*345as cutter, the repeated promises to repair the machinery for hoisting and lowering the cross-head so as to do work in raising and lowering without pressure on the belts, and the acts of his foreman and the superintendent influenced and caused him to continue as such helper until he was injured. It was the duty of one Avery, as superintendent of the quarry, to see that all machinery in the quarries , was kept in proper repair, and, when necessary, to determine what repairs should be made upon the machinery when in use, and to replace old or worn out parts of the machinery by repairing the same, or with new machinery when necessary, and to have the machinery repaired, when necessary, by a machinist kept for that purpose. The appellant had no right to order or make repairs for the machinery.

While acting as a helper to the foreman on the planer, the appellant, on the 20th of February, 1890, received a serious injury to his right hand. The injury was caused by said hand being caught in “one of said belts” and pulleys. At the time his said hand was caught and was injured, the appellant was pressing “upon said belt” with an iron rod; that is, he was pressing upon the one of said belts in which his hand was caught. It was found that he was standing, at the time of receiving the injury, in the usual position on the top of the planer and in the discharge of his duties as such helper. He was acting at the time as helper to one Bruce, called his foreman, in the operation of the planer. He was applying the pressure to the belt when he was hurt. He had been directed so to apply the pressure to the belt by the appellant through.its foreman, Bruce.

His injury consisted in having his hand caught under the belt upon the pulley and the flesh and tendons torn from the palm and fingers by the belt passing

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.E. 467, 19 Ind. App. 341, 1898 Ind. App. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-romona-oolitic-stone-co-indctapp-1898.