Ready v. Peavy Elevator Co.

94 N.W. 442, 89 Minn. 154, 1903 Minn. LEXIS 474
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 24, 1903
DocketNos. 13,448—(68)
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 94 N.W. 442 (Ready v. Peavy Elevator Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ready v. Peavy Elevator Co., 94 N.W. 442, 89 Minn. 154, 1903 Minn. LEXIS 474 (Mich. 1903).

Opinion

START, C. J.

The plaintiff’s intestate, R. B. Ready, was employed by the defendant to work as a carpenter in its grain elevator in the village of Green Isle, this state. On June 9, 1901, while so working, he was caught in a revolving line shaft, and thereby received injuries which resulted in his death seven days thereafter. This action was brought by his personal representative to recover damages for his death, for the. alleged reason that it was caused by the negligence of the defendant in putting the shaft in motion without notice, warning, or instruction to him.

There was a general verdict for the plaintiff for $2,000. The jury also answered in the affirmative the following question:

[155]*155“In the use of his senses, and the exercise of reasonable care, ought Beady to have known that the line shaft was in motion at the time he was caught upon it and injured?” ■

The defendant appealed from an order denying its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, or for a new trial.

It is the contention of the defendant that it conclusively appears from the evidence that it was not guilty of any negligence which was the proximate cause of the intestate’s death, and, further, that his own negligence contributed thereto, and that he assumed the risks of working near the revolving shaft.

1. It is unnecessary to discuss the first claim, for, if the intestate was not guilty of contributory negligence, and did not assume the risks, the evidence is ample to establish the alleged negligence of the defendant, and its liability for his death. The evidence tends to show that the defendant directed him to work near a line shaft, and in an extremely perilous position if the shaft were put in motion without notice or warning to him, and that it did so put it in motion, and that by reason thereof he was caught by the 'revolving shaft and flung to his death.

2. 'The defendant, however, .strenuously insists that the evidence conclusively shows that the intestate was guilty of negligence in the premises which contributed to his injury, and that he assumed the risks of the situation. The evidence relevant to these questions is practically the same, and they may be considered together.

It appears from the record that the intestate was a carpenter by occupation, and a man of mature years and judgment; but it does not appear what experience, if any, he had in the construction or repair of grain elevators, or the operation of the machinery therein. About a week before the accident he was employed by the defendant as a carpenter to assist in making some changes in its elevator. The principal change was to substitute a gasoline engine for a steam engine, and he was employed in building a house for the new engine. Before this work was completed, and in the forenoon of the day of the accident, the line shaft was disconnected from the old engine and attached to the new one. In doing so, it was necessary to lengthen it by a coupler, which was [156]*156left uncovered. In the afternoon the intestate was directed to go and repair a grain spout which was sixteen inches above the shaft. He complied with the order, and proceeded to construct a scaffold upon which to stand in doing the work. No claim is made that the scaffold was not properly constructed and placed. It was twenty-seven inches from the top of the scaffold to the bottom of the shaft. It was necessary for him, in order to do the work assigned to him, to stand on this scaffold and work in close proximity to the shaft with its coupler. While he was so occupied, the shaft was put in motion without notice to him. The undisputed evidence shows that just prior to the accident the shaft started,, stopped, and started again; but the evidence as to how long the shaft ran the first time it was started, how long the second time, how much noise it made when in motion, and the length of time intervening between its stopping and starting again, is somewhat conflicting. The defendant’s agent in charge of the elevator testified, in effect, that the shaft was in motion the first time only a short time — a little longer than a minute before it stopped; that when in motion it was itself noiseless, but when it was run for the purpose of elevating grain there was some noise from the scraping of the cups. The witness further testified on this point as follows:

“Q. Did the elevator make considerable noise when it was running? 'A. Not much noise; no, sir. Q. What machinery was running at that time ? A. The whole business was running. Q. That doesn’t make very much noise? A. Not a great deal; no.”

The testimony of other witnesses tended to show that the machinery, when it was in operation, made a great noise. The evidence as to the time intervening between the stopping and starting of the shaft varies from two to twenty minutes;- and as to how long it ran the second time, from five to fifteen minutes. It must, however, have been a very short time, if the testimony of a witness is correct who was working with the intestate on the scaffold, but left shortly before the accident. He testified that the shaft was not started before he left, and that he returned in four or five minutes, and that the accident occurred in his absence.

The defendant’s superintendent testified that the intestate, in [157]*157response to a question put’ by him as to how he got hurt, stated that he was nailing the spout overhead on the side nearest to him, and then attempted to crawl under the shaft to nail the other side of the spout, and was caught by the shaft in the back of his vest. This conversation took place shortly after the intestate had been taken home to his wife and children, and .at a time when it was a great effort for him to speak. Counsel for the defendant concedes that,

“If decedent had been caught and injured immediately upon the starting of the machinery, it would undoubtedly have been a question for the jury to determine whether or not the defendant was guilty of negligence in so starting the machinery without warning, but it is beyond the realm of dispute that decedent was not so caught and injured.”

It is clear from the evidence that the intestate was not injured immediately after the machinery started the first time. On the contrary, there was evidence, as already suggested, tending to show that he was caught and injured very shortly after the shaft was started the second time. Whether he attempted to crawl under the shaft to get to the opposite side of the spout was, in view of the circumstances under which his alleged admission to that effect was obtained, a question of fact. If, however, it appears so conclusively from the whole evidence that reasonable minds could not draw different conclusions therefrom that the intestate knew, or in the exercise of ordinary care must have known, that the shaft was in motion for a time long enough before he was caught by it to enable him to appreciate his peril and avoid it by the exercise of ordinary care, it must be held, as a matter of law, that he was guilty of contributory negligence, and assumed the risks incident to continuing his work while the shaft was revolving. If such were the case, he had all the information in the premises that he would have had if the defendant had warned him that the ■shaft was to be put in motion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 N.W. 442, 89 Minn. 154, 1903 Minn. LEXIS 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ready-v-peavy-elevator-co-minn-1903.