Scheurer v. Banner Rubber Co.

126 S.W. 1037, 227 Mo. 347, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 105
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 31, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 126 S.W. 1037 (Scheurer v. Banner Rubber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scheurer v. Banner Rubber Co., 126 S.W. 1037, 227 Mo. 347, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 105 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis in favor of the defendant, in a • suit for damages for personal injuries.

At the time he received his injuries, plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant and was operating a machine known as a shaping machine, used for working over old rubber stock or the remains of rubber sheets out of which rubber shoe heels had been stamped. The sheet of rubber was first warmed up by passing it through a machine with heated rollers, and after being thus warmed and softened it was passed through the shaping machine. The warming machine and the shaping machine were substantially similar, the difference being that in the warming machine the rollers were heated. The machines consisted of two horizontal metal rollers, about three and one-half or four feet long and two feet in diameter, which were caused to roll towards each other, the space between [352]*352them at the nearest point of approach being abont an inch and a half. The rollers stood about three feet from the floor, and the operator of the machine caused the rubber sheet to pass between them from the top, and after passing through and down, the operator reached under the roller, took hold of the projecting end of the sheet of rubber, pulled it up and around the roller nearest him, and then with his left hand pushed the middle of the sheet down between the rollers just far enough to allow the rollers to grip the sheet which, by the motion of the rollers, is doubled up and passed through as before. This operation was repeated until the rubber stock was thoroughly worked, and in proper condition for use. There were several of these machines set in a row in the room where plaintiff was working, and at the time of the injury a number of other employees of the company were at work in said room. The rollers on these machines were caused to revolve by a cog wheel connection with the line shaft beneath the floor and under the row of machines. An engine was in the room adjoining this room, and the line shaft from which the machines received their power was connected with the main shaft of the engine by a clutch. When the jaws of this clutch were caused to open, the power of the main shaft of the engine was no longer communicated to the line shaft, and the machines would stop, although the engine might still be running. Plaintiff had. been operating these machines in defendant’s factory some four or five months prior to the injury. In the room, and in connection with the machines, was a safety device or appliance called an emergency brake, to be used in case of an accident or injury to an employee by being caught in the machinery. This emergency brake was operated by a horizontal 'wooden bar or lever, about two and one-half inches wide and one inch thick, located about six feet above the floor and over the machine. One of these bars or levers was plaeed over each [353]*353machine. By pulling down on said lever an electric switch was closed and a current of electricity caused to pass through an electric lock, a certain part in which lock was thus converted into a magnet, which caused a catch to he released, permitting a heavy weight to pull open the clutch on the line shaft, which line shaft was thus disconnected from the main shaft of the engine. By means of a second electric lock, operated hy the same current which passed through the lock controlling the clutch, the steam was caused to be shut off from the engine. If-both electric locks were in good order when the current was caused to flow by the act of pulling down on the safety lever over the machines, both locks would operate, and thereby not only would the clutch connecting the line shaft with the main shaft be caused to open, but the steam from the engine would also be shut off. If the emergency brake, as the appliance-including lever, current, wires and locks — was called, was in good order, the pulling down of the bar or lever over any of the machines would cause the machines to stop almost instantaneously, and the rollers would not thereafter revolve as much as three inches. Tacked on each side of the wooden lever over each machine was a sign reading: “Don’t touch this rod unless some one is caught in the machinery or in ease of severe accident. Then pull down hard on it, and the machinery will stop. Any one who pulls this rod, when it is not absolutely necessary, will be discharged.”

On the afternoon of February 13, 1905, the plaintiff was passing a sheet of rubber, weighing about twenty pounds, between the rollers of his shaping machine. He had .passed it through the machine once, and had reached down with his right hand under the machine and taken hold of the sheet as it came through, and had pulled it up and around the roller next to him. Then, with his right hand holding the top end of the [354]*354rubber sheet, and his left hand against the middle, he was pressing the rubber towards the space between the rollers, when, either because the flap slipped out of his right hand and struck his left elbow, or for some other reason, the fingers of his left hand got caught, with the rubber sheet, between the rollers. As soon as pláintiff felt his fingers caught he took hold of the emergency brake bar, which was over his machine, and pulled down on it, but it failed to operate, and he kept pulling until the bar broke. Another employee in the room, hearing him “hollow,” and seeing his predicament, pulled down on the emergency brake bar over his machine, but that also failed to cause the machinery to stop. Thereupon the defendant’s foreman, who had seen what had happened, ran into- the engine room and told the engineer to turn the steam off, but by the time this was done, and the momentum of the engine had spent itself, the plaintiff’s arm had been drawn between the rollers, its whole length, and the rollers had to be pried apart before he was released. As a result of this crushing of his arm, it was necessary that same night to amputate it at the shoulder socket.

Defendant’s foreman testified that the emergency brake was tested about every two weeks, and that it was not tested for “fourteen days or three weeks before it broke.” The plaintiff testified that as long as he had been working there he had never seen the foreman test the brake. About three days after the injury, and before any repair or change had been made in the electrical lock controlling the clutch, the foreman was shown it by the engineer, who had taken it down. He testified that there was a part of the electrical lock broken, which break effectually prevented the lock from operating, and prevented any current from passing through it.

The defendant offered no evidence, but at the close of plaintiff’s case- asked for an instruction in the nature [355]*355of a demurrer to the evidence, which was refused, aud the defendant then announced that it rested.

Under the instructions of the 'court, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant, and judgment was entered accordingly. Plaintiff duly filed! his motion for a new trial, which was overruled, whereupon he appealed to this court.

Plaintiff contends that the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded for new trial bv reason of error in the giving of certain instructions. Instructions numbered 1 and 6 are particularly assailed. The former read's as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
126 S.W. 1037, 227 Mo. 347, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scheurer-v-banner-rubber-co-mo-1910.