Ryan v. Fall River Iron Works Co.

86 N.E. 310, 200 Mass. 188, 1908 Mass. LEXIS 1025
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 86 N.E. 310 (Ryan v. Fall River Iron Works Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ryan v. Fall River Iron Works Co., 86 N.E. 310, 200 Mass. 188, 1908 Mass. LEXIS 1025 (Mass. 1908).

Opinion

Rugg, J.

This is an action of tort brought under the employers’ liability act, for injuries occasioned to the plaintiff while an operator in the weave room of the defendant’s cotton mill, and alleged to have been caused by a defect in its ways, works and machinery. The plaintiff had been at work for the defendant for about thirteen years previous to the accident. One of the machines upon which she worked was a Mason loom, which had been in use a good many years. It was started and stopped by a shipper, which moved the belt on to and from a tight and a loose pulley. The plaintiff testified, in substance, that about three months before the accident she had a lot of trouble with this loom; it required oiling more frequently than any other loom, and the pulleys were “ going up and down; ” it not being her duty to care for the machinery, she reported, and a loom [190]*190fixer did something to it; the following week he took both pulleys off, and did some filing, and then replaced the pulleys, and put some pieces of tin or hoop iron in the side of the loom where the shaft runs above the box, “ between the box and the side of the loom holding the box into the side of the loom ”; some of these pieces came out twice and dropped on the floor, and she again called the fixer’s attention to it; after these pieces fell out both the tight and loose “pulleys would keep jumping up and down ” at the same time, both when the belt was on the loose pulley and when it was on the tight pulley; the pieces seemed to her to be put in to prevent the shaking of the pulleys; after the loom had been fixed, it did not run right, and the shafting used to get hot, and the fixer came to it; it had been running all right for a week before the accident. There was also evidence tending to show that the use of hoop iron for holding the box of the shaft, on which were tight and loose pulleys, into the side of the loom was not a proper appliance, and that its use for packing, although common, was not right, and the tendency of such appliances, the purpose of which was to hold the shaft true, would be to let the shaft get out of true, and that this would permit the belt to creep from the loose to the tight pulley. According to the plaintiff, the accident happened in this way: She stopped the loom for the purpose of repairing a bad place in the weaving; while doing this, with no one else near, the loom started without any apparent cause, and caught and injured her arm. The force of all this testimony was broken somewhat by the cross-examination, but the jury might still have given it full credence. There was also testimony from the loom fixer of the defendant that the repairs made consisted of replacing an old and worn out shaft with a new one. This evidence, if believed, was sufficient to bring the case within the rule established in a considerable number of decisions.

In most cases of the automatic starting of machines from a state of rest, there has been some evidence of a previous similar starting, with notice of which the defendant might have been charged. Donahue v. Drown, 154 Mass. 21. Mooney v. Connecticut River Lumber Co. 154 Mass. 407. Martineau v. National Blank Book Co. 166 Mass. 4. Packer v. Thomson-Houston Electric Co. 175 Mass. 496. O'Neil v. Ginn, 188 Mass. 346. [191]*191Lynch v. Stevens & Sons Co. 187 Mass. 397. Fountaine v. Wampanoag Mills, 189 Mass. 498. But it is not necessary, in order to establish negligence of the defendant, that it should have had express notice of the precise irregularity which resulted in the injury. It is enough if such circumstances appear as to render it likely that the harmful event would not have happened except for some act or omission amounting to a want of ordinary precaution. The mere starting of a machine, without the intervention of any human agency and when it should have remained at rest, is of itself evidence of some defective condition. To this extent the doctrine of res ipso loquitur has been established. Gregory v. American Thread Co. 187 Mass. 239, 242. See Coleman v. Mechanics’ Iron Foundry Co. 168 Mass. 254; White v. Boston & Albany Railroad, 144 Mass. 404. Here the machine had been in use many years, and the shaft had become so worn that it was necessary to substitute a new one, and there was some slight evidence that the adjustment of the new shaft to the old loom was made in such a manner that it might have been foreseen by one familiar with the mechanism, that the belt was liable to work from the loose to the tight pulley. These circumstances, in connection with the fact of the starting of the machine, constituted not only evidence of a defective condition of the machine, but also that the defendant, in the exercise of due precaution, might have discovered the defect. Gregory v. American Thread Co. 187 Mass. 239. Connors v. Durite Manuf. Co. 156 Mass. 163. The defendant’s first, fourth, sixth and eighth requests for instructions were therefore properly refused.

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.E. 310, 200 Mass. 188, 1908 Mass. LEXIS 1025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-v-fall-river-iron-works-co-mass-1908.