Planters' Cotton & Ginning Co. v. Penny

1916 OK 202, 155 P. 516, 53 Okla. 136, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 373
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 15, 1916
Docket7346
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1916 OK 202 (Planters' Cotton & Ginning Co. v. Penny) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Planters' Cotton & Ginning Co. v. Penny, 1916 OK 202, 155 P. 516, 53 Okla. 136, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 373 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

On August 1, 1912, in the superior court of Pottawatomie county, Jesse J. Penny, defendant in error, sued Planters’ Cotton & Ginning Company, plaintiff in error, in damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him while in the employ *137 of defendant and at work in its cotton gin at Okemah. The petition substantially states that the cotton gin was an institution where machinery was used; that defendant failed to provide belt shifters and loose pulleys for the purpose of throwing the belts and stopping the saws of the gin stand at which plaintiff was employed by defendant to work and was working at the time he was injured (both of which he says were practical devices), in violation of Revised Laws 1910, sec. 3746; that, while working at said gin stand, and while it was in operation, it became his duty to force cotton seed through the gin pans into the conveyors beneath; that in order so to do it was necessary to and he did run his right arm into an opening in the gin between the seed pan and the saws revolving above the pan; and that while so doing his arm was caught in the saws, without negligence on his part, and his hand cut off, and his arm so mutilated as to require amputation between the shoulder and.elbow, to his damage, etc.

For answer, after a general denial, defendant specifically denied that plaintiff was employed to work in any part of the gin building except the engine room; denied that he was employed or that it was his duty to work in the gin room or about the gin stand at which he was • injured; and denied that, if he was so employed, defendant had failed to comply with the statute as alleged. Defendant also pleaded contributory negligence and assumption of risk.

After issue joined by reply, there was trial to a jury in the district court, to which the cause had been transferred, and judgment for plaintiff for $1,250, and defendant brings the case here.

*138 The demurrer to the evidence was properly overruled, for the reason there was sufficient to take the case to- the jury on the question of defendant’s negligence on plaintiff’s theory of the case. Upon this point the evidence disclosed that plaintiff at the time he was injured was about 25 years old. Two days theretofore he applied to "the foreman of defendant’s gin for .employment. When the foreman asked him what he could do, he replied, “Just anything; have you any firing?” to which the foreman said, “No,” and requested that he come back in the morning, at which time the foreman said he would put plaintiff to work, which he did. At that time the foreman said he did not have a full crew, and would expect plaintiff to help the boys in doing anything necessary in running the gin. Part of the time he was employed he acted as fireman, and part of the time he kept the gin stands clear and going, to the knowledge of the foreman, who saw him working at the gin stands. At other times the foreman had the plaintiff sewing belts and going back and forth uptown getting repairs for the same and doing general work about the gin. In short, the foreman had him at work doing whatever was necessary about the plant. The evidence further tended to prove that the gin on which plaintiff was injured was run by a belt over a tight pulley on the line shaft connected with a corresponding pulley on another shaft running through the line of gins in which the gin in question was one. This shaft ran the internal machinery of the gin in question, which consisted of a system of revolving saws through which the cotton passed and dropped its seed into a pan, some 28 inches below, from which they passed into a conveyor consisting of a huge auger-shaped contrivance which ran longitudinally in a box on the floor and which carried the seed away. At the time he was *139 injured the seed in the particular gin in which plaintiff was injured became clogged in the seed pan, and failing to drop through into the conveyor as it should, plaintiff took a stick about two feet long and thrust his arm into a triangular hole in the end of the gin between the gin pan and the saws revolving above the gin pan and about eight inches above his arm, and undertook, with the stick, to force the seed through the gin pan into the conveyor, when his arm was caught by the saws and injured to such an extent as to require amputation. His testimony was to the effect that the saws could have been stopped and the gin pan and conveyor left running had defendant complied with the statute by having a belt shifter which he could have grasped by reaching up, and by pulling could have shifted the belt and stopped the saw before thrusting his arm into the position he did. ' The witness London also testified to the practicability of the same mechanical arrangement. Of course, there was abundant testimony, in effect, that no such device was practical; but there being evidence reasonably tending to prove that it was and. to support plaintiff’s theory of the case, the court did right in sending the case to the jury on the question of the negligence of defendant.

Plaintiff having prevailed on his theory, all that remains to consider is whether the court erred in the admission or rejection of evidence or in his instructions to the jury. If he did neither, the judgment must be affirmed. As to the former, there being no error, we turn to the assignment that the court erred in charging the jury thus:

“The burden of proving contributory negligence is on the defendant, and, unless the jury is reasonably satisfied from the evidence that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence himself which proximately helped to bring about *140 his own injuries, the defendant must fail in his defense of contributory negligence.”

Defendant contends that this was error, because, he says:

“The instruction, by the words ‘the defendant must fail on its defense of contributory negligence unless the jury are reasonably satisfied from the evidence,’ placed upon the defendant the burden of proving by its own evidence-that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. In other words, the instruction is tantamont to saying to the jury that the defendant by its own evidence must show that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence or must fail in its defense.”

Not so, for the reason that, as plaintiff’s was the only direct evidence on contributory negligence, it was but fair to presume that by “the evidence” the court meant his evidence. Besides, such is bound to be true, for the reason that there was no eyewitness to the' accident, and defendant offered no evidence in support of its plea of contributory negligence, but relied on showing such by plaintiff’s evidence alone. In these circumstances we think the charge fairly states the law. There is no error in the remaining instructions, for the reason that, taking them as a whole, they fairly state the law. As to instruction No. 14, we might say in passing that, although it permits defendant in error to recover “his loss of wages- up to this time, if any,” which means up to the time of trial, we will not hold the same to be reversible error, although to support the charge there is'no evidence of loss of wages other than for nine months after the injury; this for the reason that in Great Western Coal & Coke Company v. Coffman, 43 Okla. 404, 143 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 202, 155 P. 516, 53 Okla. 136, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/planters-cotton-ginning-co-v-penny-okla-1916.