Schaefer v. Cincinnati Bickford Tool Co.

13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 553, 24 Ohio Dec. 266, 1913 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 50
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedJanuary 24, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 553 (Schaefer v. Cincinnati Bickford Tool Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schaefer v. Cincinnati Bickford Tool Co., 13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 553, 24 Ohio Dec. 266, 1913 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 50 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Pugh, J.

The plaintiff, John E. Schaefer, on May 28th, 1912, while in the employment of the defendant company as a blacksmith, was injured while engaged in “stoving” a piece of “high speed” steel, and, on August 24th, 1912, brought this suit against said company for damages. The case was tried before this court and a jury, and resulted in a verdict for the defendant. It now comes before the court on motion for a new trial.

The plaintiff alleged that he was directed and required, against his objection, to “stove” a “high speed” steel tool by what [554]*554we will call the “hammer and anvil” method, which was unsafe and dangerous, when his employer could have used or caused to be used other methods, which were not dangerous, such as the steam-hammer or the stoving machine, and that while “stoving” the tool as ordered, a fragment of steel flew off from it with great force and velocity and struck his right leg and became imbedded in it at or near the knee joint. He further stated that the work could ‘be done as well or better by using a steam-hammer or stoving machine, without any risk to the workman, and that these were the means of doing such work in common use by manufacturers engaged in the same business as the defendant.

No claim was made that any of the tools furnished him were defective, or out of repair; but he says that the process of “stoving” which he was ordered to use — the “hammer and anvil” method — was dangerous, and that his employer was guilty of a “wrongful act, neglect and default” in compelling him to use it and in failing to provide a steam-hammer or stoving machine as requested.

The defendant is an employer of more than five workmen and has not paid the premiums provided for in the Workmen’s Compensation Act, and its liability for injuries to its employes is determined by Section 21-1 of that act (102 O. L., 529), which is now Section 1465-60 of the General Code. The issue for the jury was, therefore, whether the. defendant had been guilty of a “wrongful act, neglect or default” in the respect set out in the petition.

(1). The jury was instructed that it was the duty of an employer to exercise • ordinary care and prudence, with regard to the safety of his employes, in selecting the method of work which he directs them to use.

(2) Also, that a failure to exercise such ordinary care and prudence is a wrongful act, neglect or default, for which, if injury is caused thereby, he is liable in damages.

(3). Also, that if an employer did exercise such ordinary care and prudence, he is not liable in damages, even though injury did result from using the method of work prescribed by him.

[555]*555These- instructions were coupled with a definition of what constitutes ordinary care and prudence, and the various applications of these rules of law to the circumstances disclosed in evidence were pointed out. The instructions to the jury were not given in such abstract and general terms as here stated, but the principle underlying them was the one above set forth.

This principle is that of the common law, and as there was no defense of the fellow-servant rule, contributory negligence or assumption of risk, the case was submitted to the jury in practically the same way and under the same rule of law as if the AVorkmen’s Compensation Act had never been passed — or, at least, had no application to the ease.

After mature consideration, the court is satisfied that these instructions were erroneous. They were given to the jury in the belief that General Code, Section 1465-60, was not intended to enlarge the common law basis of recovery for negligence, other than by taking away from an employer the defense of the fellow-servant rule, contributory negligence and assumption of risk. The following considerations will show that such belief is not well founded:

■ The grounds of recovery set out in General Code, Section 1465-60, are “the wrongful act, neglect or default” of the employer. There is no qualification whatever, nothing to indicate that the “neglect or default” which fixes liability must be gross neglect, or slight neglect, or such neglect as is entailed by failure to exercise ordinary care and prudence. The naked words, “neglect or default” employed, import, prima facie, all neglects and all defaults.

To limit these terms to such neglect or default as is the equivalent of failure to exercise ordinary care and prudence, as the court did in its instructions, requires a resort to construction; it necessitates reading into the language .of the statute some qualification not expressed therein.

Is there any sufficient reason why such an employer should not be held to the plain, unqualified language of the law?

He has been invited to avail himself of the protection against liability of this bind afforded him by the preceding sections of [556]*556the Workmen’s Compensation Act, and has refused to accept it. If anything, this furnishes a reason why his liability should be extended, not limited, by construction.

' The idea of a higher degree of care and prudence in the matters of every-day life, than is exacted at common law from a master towards a servant, is quite familiar. It is the common law rule governing the conduct of common carriers with regard to their passengers. Whether this same rule should or should not govern the -relation between master and servant is merely a question of policy. There is nothing startling in the conception, nor would there be any special hardship imposed thereby on the employer which is not imposed as heavily on the common carrier.

It is argued, with some force, that the statutory words “wrongful act, neglect or default,” are already known to the law, and have always been understood to import such negligence only as is otherwise expressed as the failure to exercise ordinary care and prudence. But I am unable to agree with counsel on this point. The principal instance used as an illustration seems to me to indicate rather the contrary of what is claimed for it. This is in the phrase found in General Code, Section 10770, which gives a cause of action for death wrongfully or negligently caused. The words are the same as in General Code, Section 1465-60, “wrongful act, neglect or default,” and it is argued that these have not been construed to give a cause of action for any negligence unless it amounted to a want of ordinary care. This argument overlooks the phrase which follows the words in question in the death statute (General Code, Section 10770), which makes the whole read “wrongful act, neglect of default, such as would have entitled the party injured to maintain an action and recover damages in respect thereof, if death had not ensued.” It appears to me at least equally as reasonable to say that, but for the qualifjdng words following the expression, “wrongful act, neglect or default” in General Code, Section 10770, recovery might have been had, where death ensued, in cases where the only neglect shown is what is called slight negligence, and where no recovery would have been possible had the injured partj^ lived.

[557]*557The imposition on employers, who refuse to accept the protection offered by the preceding sections of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, of a liability greater than has ever before existed in this state, seems to have been deliberately intended by the language of General Code, Section 1465-60.

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13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 553, 24 Ohio Dec. 266, 1913 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schaefer-v-cincinnati-bickford-tool-co-ohsuperctcinci-1913.