Salowich v. National Lead Co.
This text of 158 A.D. 445 (Salowich v. National Lead Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The primary question is whether there was error in the charge to the jury. The plaintiff’s arm was carried into unguarded cogwheels which he was oiling and which were one foot and seven inches above a tank eight feet and two inches high. It was the conceded duty of the plaintiff to oil the wheels when the shaft was at rest. He states that he ascended the ladder placed against the tank, stood on the second rung and “ was about putting that oil can into one of [446]*446those holes ” when the machine started. The machine could start only from the belt passing from the loose to the tight pulley, and, as plaintiff testified, it made the change in this instance without interference by anybody. In his experience of ten years in that service it had happened only about a week before the accident, which he reported to the foreman as well as the absence of guards, and the latter replied that he would report it to the chief engineer, who would fix it. The plaintiff added that he also reported a loose screw related to the belt-shifter. The foreman denied that there was any conversation on the subject. The screw had no effect upon the starting of the machinery and may be disregarded here as it should have been upon the trial. The tank was used for mixing water, acid and lead, and the machinery was started in usual practice after the introduction of the lead began. The plaintiff states that there was no lead in the tank at the time the machinery started, and so in usual course should not have been in motion. But the foreman said, with doubtful credence, that there was lead in it and that it was in motion. The statement of the plaintiff, that it was not, was supported by a fellow-workman called by the defendant. Several times each day the plaintiff, or some other of several persons, was required to go up the ladder and use a stick in the tank to test the composition, and for that purpose raise the stick up and down, whereby his hand came near to the cogwheel, an inch or two therefrom, as plaintiff states. So the jury would have been justified in finding that the cogwheels were not properly guarded to protect workmen testing the mixture in the tank. But no guard was necessary to protect one oiling the wheels, as no one was permitted to do so when they were in motion, and if plaintiff attempted to oil the moving parts he was guilty-of disobedience of the practice and brought about his own injury. But it is necessary to go a step further. What if the machine self-started while plaintiff was oiling it ? Then was defendant liable for leaving it unguarded % Yes, if it could be properly found that there was reason for believing that it might start either without or through the master’s negligence as to the shifting of the belt. But in ten years it had started but once, and defendant’s foreman was found to have had [447]*447notice of it a week before. If this be true, what should the defendant have done ? Corrected the self-shifting or guarded the cogs or both, and if it neglected either was it liable to plaintiff % If the jury was justified under the evidence in finding that with or without the defendant’s fault there was practical, and in the use of due care recognizable, danger of the wheels beginning to move while the plaintiff was oiling them, and so injuring him, it was justified in holding that defendant had disobeyed the statute. (See Labor Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 31; Laws of 1909, chap. 36], § 81, as amd. by Laws of 1910, chap. 106.)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
158 A.D. 445, 143 N.Y.S. 606, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salowich-v-national-lead-co-nyappdiv-1913.