Sawyer v. Rumford Falls Paper Co.

38 A. 318, 90 Me. 354, 1897 Me. LEXIS 92
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 31, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 38 A. 318 (Sawyer v. Rumford Falls Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sawyer v. Rumford Falls Paper Co., 38 A. 318, 90 Me. 354, 1897 Me. LEXIS 92 (Me. 1897).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

The plaintiff obtained a verdict for $4250 as compensation for personal injuries sustained while employed in the paper mill of the defendant company at Rumford Falls. The case comes up on a motion to have this verdict set aside as against the evidence relating to the question of the defendant’s liability, and also because the damages are excessive.

The case was presented to the jury on the testimony of the plaintiff and his witnesses, no testimony being introduced by the defendant.

The accident occurred on the 7th day of December, 1894, while the plaintiff was engaged in the service of the company in the [358]*358capacity of “third hand” in a gang of four on the No. 2 paper machine in the defendant’s mill. At that time he was twenty years old and had been employed in the mill about eighteen months in the aggregate, viz: about five months as a helper in setting up machines, about five months as a “fourth hand” and about seven months as “third hand” on the No. 2 machine. The mill was operated day and night, and on the occasion in question he was on the night gang. About four o’clock 'in the morning of December 7, by reason of the breaking of the dynamo-belt, the electric lights by which the mill was lighted were suddenly extinguished, leaving the machine room where the plaintiff was employed as well as the rest of the mill in complete darkness. What then happened the plaintiff described in.his testimony as follows: “ When the light went out I was where the winder is, and I was sitting down with the fourth hand, and the machine tender was down to the wet end, lighting a match once in a while. Six or seven minutes after the light went out the machine tender whistled, and he lighted a piece of paper and we went down, the fourth hand and I; and he gave me the order to pull the broke the [broken paper] off the second press; so I went and I stand on that step and I begun to pull off the broke, and the broke was choked. . . '. When T stepped up on that stand I went to pull the broke and I went to pull it out and the paper gave way in my hand and I fell backward, and I went to stop myself from falling and I went to put my hand on the rod or lever, some call it a rod, and I missed that rod and I fell, my hand on the top of the felt, and my hand went between the rolls and it caught my hand here and you see how it cut it.” As the result of the accident the plaintiff lost three fingers and a portion of the forefinger of his left hand, and a portion of the outside of the hand itself.

There was evidence tending to show that the dynamo-belt was old and much worn, and being used in a wet place, its strength had become so impaired that it was no longer suitable for use.

It also appears that from different causes, the electric lights had frequently been extinguished prior to this time, on an average two or three times a week, and that they had twice been out for a few [359]*359moments, on the night in question, before the time when the accident happened. In anticipation of these contingencies, a supply of lanterns had been provided for temporary use while the electric lights were out in the room where the paper machines were located; but for several months prior to December 7, 1894, none of these lanterns appear to be in existence, and no others had been furnished to take the place of those broken or carried away.

There was, however, on each press of the paper machine, what is termed a friction clutch, which was used to stop one or more of the presses while the machines were still running; and orders had been given by the superintendent to all of the machine tenders to stop the presses whenever the lights went out, and the paper broke in the night time. But there was evidence that this order was disobeyed by the machine tender, who had charge of the operating of machine No. 2, and had been disobeyed by others prior to that time.

In view of this evidence it is contended, for the plaintiff, that there was actionable negligence on the part of the defendant company in at least these three particulars; first, the continued use of a defective dynamo-belt with full knowledge of its condition; second, the omission to provide any temporary lights to supply the place of the electric lights which were known by the defendant to be frequently extinguished; and finally the retention of a disobedient machine-tender after the knowledge of his alleged inefficiency and incompetency. It is confidently urged that as a practical result of these conditions, the plaintiff was required to labor in total darkness in connection with dangerous machinery, and that on the occasion in question, while faithfully and zealously performing his master’s work, the plaintiff sustained an injury which ho would not have received if the room had been suitably provided with light or with means for lighting it. It is claimed that, although the unexpected breaking of the choked paper which the plaintiff was struggling to draw out of the machine may have been the immediate occasion of his fall, the absence of light was the reason why he failed to seize the lever to save himself from falling; that such an occurrence might reasonably be expected to result from [360]*360such a cause, either in the way it did happen or some similar way, and that it must be regarded as the real and proximate cause of the injury.

On the other hand, the learned counsel for the defendant company as confidently argue that there was no causal connection between the temporary absence of light in the machine room and the plaintiff’s injury; that the injury was not the ordinary or probable result of the darkness in the room, but was due to the breaking of the choked paper, a wholly unlooked-for and unexpected event, and must be deemed a purely accidental occurrence causing damage without legal fault on the part of any one.

It is also suggested that, as the machine tender was only a fellow-servant, his failure to stop the rolls of the press by the use of the friction clutch was but the negligence of a fellow-servant, for which the defendant is not responsible, if indeed the failure to use it was not the negligence of the plaintiff himself.

It is further contended that the plaintiff was under no obligation to obey directions from any one to labor in an unsuitable and dangerous place, and that if he continued to labor in such a place, or obeyed an order to perform a special service in such a place, with full knowledge and appreciation of the dangers, he must be held to have assumed all the risks incident to the service under such circumstances.

Finally, it is insisted that the plaintiff should be precluded from recovering by his own want of ordinary care and prudence; that after the lights went out he sat for six or seven minutes in a place of perfect safety; if he had remained there no accident would have befallen him; and that the act of stepping from such a place of security into close proximity to the running machinery and of reaching over it to perform a dangerous service in the midst of total darkness, was imprudent and reckless, and must be deemed contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff.

The principles of law applicable to these several contentions of the parties, on the one side and the other, have been so fully considered and carefully distinguished in the recent decisions of this court, that no further discussion of them can be required on the [361]*361motion here presented for a new trial as against evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 A. 318, 90 Me. 354, 1897 Me. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawyer-v-rumford-falls-paper-co-me-1897.