Radic v. Thomas Jackson & Co.

146 N.W. 136, 178 Mich. 618, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 767
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1914
DocketDocket No. 31
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 146 N.W. 136 (Radic v. Thomas Jackson & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Radic v. Thomas Jackson & Co., 146 N.W. 136, 178 Mich. 618, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 767 (Mich. 1914).

Opinion

Osteandee, J.

The declaration contains two counts, upon the second of which the case was submitted to the jury. In that count, two duties which the defendant owed to plaintiff are alleged, one a duty not to engage him in any hazardous employment, the other to cover, guard, and protect the revolving knives upon the machine at which plaintiff was set to work. As to this second allegation of duty and the fact which it assumes, it and the evidence upon the subject introduced at the trial were treated as an element of hazard, and not as establishing a duty and breach of it for which plaintiff was entitled to recover.

Two principal questions were submitted to the jury: First, whether plaintiff was employed in a hazardous employment; and, second, whether his own negligence caused or contributed to his injury. It is the contention of the defendant that upon neither of these propositions was there any question for the jury, who should have been instructed as a matter of law both that plaintiff was not employed in any hazardous employment and that he had not estab[620]*620lished the fact that his own negligence did not contribute to his injury. It is a further contention of defendant that the undisputed evidence conclusively establishes the contributory negligence of plaintiff.

Two errors are assigned upon the charge of the court as given, which will be considered in their order. Decision of the principal questions involve a careful reading of the testimony given at the trial. The statute (Act No. 220, Pub. Acts 1911, § 11, 2 How. Stat. [2d Ed.] § 4019) provides that no male under the age of 18 years shall be employed in any hazardous employment; the legislature meaning, we assume, an employment which is in fact hazardous. Plaintiff was born December 26, 1895. He was inj ured March 1, 1912. At the time of his injury he was 4 feet 10 inches in height, weighed 90 pounds, was in sound health, and was physically able to perform the work at which he was set. He had been to school five years, passed the fifth grade, had studied geography, arithmetic, drawing, and other branches. Receiving in September, 1911, a permit to work (section 10, Act No. 285, Pub. Acts 1909, 2 Plow. Stat. [2d Ed.] §4018), defendant set him to work upon a machine called the sticker, where he worked for about two months, when he was employed to work upon a machine called a tenoner, which was the employment in which he was injured. Upon this machine he worked daily until he was injured. The machine was a Hayes double-end tenoner, a standard machine, purchased by defendant in 1902, made of iron and steel throughout, about 8 feet long, and so constructed that in its operation it fashioned a tenon at each end of each board put through the machine. The only knives outside of the machine, extending beyond the dimensions of the frame of the machine, are called cope knives. They cut the sticking or molding at both ends and on both sides of the board. That is to say, there were two knives at each side of the machine, one [621]*621above and one below, secured to a shaft, and revolving horizontally.

When the plaintiff was injured, these sets of knives were about 28 inches apart and in plain sight. Plaintiff knew about them, knew how they worked, knew he would be injured if he touched them.

Boards intended to be treated by this machine are passed through it automatically by means of an endless chain which carries them to and beyond the knives and delivers them free at the other end of the table. To hold the boards firmly in position when they engage the knives, there are two pressure bars, one on each side of the machine. Once a board has become engaged with the chain and under the pressure bars, it cannot be removed or hurried until, by the movement of the chain, it is delivered free from the pressure bars, and a few inches beyond them, at the end of the table. Plaintiff’s duty was to take the boards as they came from the machine, and, carrying them a short distance, pile them up on the floor. In doing his work, he would usually carry perhaps four or five boards, piling one upon the other as they came through the machine. The pressure bars are 18 inches apart, 2 inches in thickness, and 33 inches long, more than a foot high in the center, and 5 or 6 inches high at the ends. As has been indicated, the cope knives revolve outside of these bars. At plaintiff’s end of the table, it was 6 inches from the point of the knives nearest to the plaintiff to the ends of the pressure bars nearest to the plaintiff. What is called the table at plaintiff’s end of this machine was simply two iron bars, about 18 inches apart, on the same level as the rest of the machine. Upon these bars the automatic carrier deposited the boards as they came from the machine, and from this so-called table the plaintiff was expected to pick up the pieces and carry them to the piles. Measured parallel with the side of the table, it is 26 inches from the end of [622]*622it nearest to plaintiff to the knives. On each side of the machine, at the end where plaintiff worked, was a spindle, 6 inches beyond the end of the table and 15 inches away from the side of the machine. On each spindle were three pulleys and three belts; the two upper belts on each side running the cope knives. Where they pass around the pulleys, it is 24 inches, vertically, between the belts. As plaintiff stood at the end of the table, the belts revolved towards him and towards the knives. The space between these two sets of belts, in which space the plaintiff had to stand to do his work, was more than 3 and less than 4 feet. On the day plaintiff was injured, the material coming through the machine was 9 inches wide, 30% inches long, and 1% inches in thickness. It was plaintiff’s habit to pile these boards one upon another, taking a number of them on each trip from the machine, getting back to the machine before other boards had come through and had fallen upon the floor. In taking up the pile of boards which he had built, it was ■his habit to take hold of the ends of the boards and, instead of backing out from between the belts which were running on each side of him, to turn himself to the left in coming away from the machine. Uniformly boys have been employed at this machine; none had ever before been injured.

As we understand the record, the situation, when plaintiff was injured, may be described substantially as follows: He stood in a space something more than 3 feet wide between revolving belts. He would have been obliged to extend his right hand and arm to nearly its full length to have put his right hand in the knives. He was picking up boards which were delivered to him at a point where the edge of the board farthest from him was about 6 inches from the knives. He had made a pile of boards on the table. Taking hold of the ends of the boards, he turned to carry them out. In a manner which he is unable to [623]*623describe, his right hand went , into the knives, and he lost two fingers of his right hand. As he stood erect at the end of the machine, the upper belts, revolving towards him and towards the knives, were about on a level with his shoulders; the space between the belts narrowing as it approached the knives. Aiding the description of the place and manner of the plaintiff’s employment, the trial court and this court had, among other things, pictures of the machine. While it appears that the work plaintiff had to do can be safely performed and had been theretofore safely performed, we are not satisfied that the employment was not hazardous, within the meaning of the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
146 N.W. 136, 178 Mich. 618, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/radic-v-thomas-jackson-co-mich-1914.