Schilly v. Baker

202 S.W.2d 348, 184 Tenn. 654, 20 Beeler 654, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 289
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 202 S.W.2d 348 (Schilly v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schilly v. Baker, 202 S.W.2d 348, 184 Tenn. 654, 20 Beeler 654, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 289 (Tenn. 1947).

Opinion

Mr. Justice: Prewitt

delivered'the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit for damages for personal injuries filed by the plaintiff, John ¡Schilly, a minor under sixteen years of age, by his next friend, against his employer, Henry D. Baker, who operated a grocery and butcher shop in Memphis. The declaration alleged: While in the employ of the defendant, on or about October 20', 1944, plaintiff .was engaged in grinding meat on a grinding mill of the defendant’s under their orders and direction, when his right hand was caught in the machinery of said mill, and three fingers, namely the ring, middle and index fingers, were cut off. ’ ’

The declaration further alleged that the defendant was negligent in that he had violated the child labor law of the State as set out in section 5316 of Williams’ Code.

The pleas filed by the defendant denied that he had violated any statute or had been guilty of any negligence, but averred that the injuries received by the plaintiff were due to his own direct and proximate negligence in *656 placing his hand some six inches down into the hopper of the machine, so that his fingers came in contact with the revolving worm and caused them to he cut off.

A motion for a directed vedlict for the defendant was duly made and overruled; and upon the hearing there was a verdict by the jury in favor of the, plaintiff for $2,500, which was approved by the trial judge, and a motion for a new trial overruled. This judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeals. We have heretofore granted certiorari and the case has been argued.

The plaintiff was nearly fifteen years • of age at the time he was injured, and was employed to work for the defendant after school hours on Fridays and all day on Saturdays and had been working for him about four weeks. The defendant operated a grocery store in the back part of which was a butcher shop, and in this shop was a sausage grinding mill or machine which was run by electricity and at the top of which was a hopper or bowl in which the meat to be ground was placed by hand and then pushed or packed down with a plunger or pusher. It was about six inches from the top of this bowl to the bottom where the worm screw caught the meat and ground it into small pieces, and the plaintiff had used this machine several times before the accident. Previously, the plaintiff had worked in a butcher shop and operated a grinding mill, but it was not of the same type as the one on which he was hurt.

The plaintiff was an intelligent boy in the tenth grade at school and was studying mechanical drawing at a night school. He was employed to wait on customers, slice bacon and grind sausage at the Baker .Store. He testified that when he got hurt he was taking meat out of a bucket and putting it into the hopper of the machine to be ground, and that in doing so the worm caught his fin *657 gers and cut them off. He also testified that he knew that if he got his fingers down too far into the machine they wonld he cut off and that he let his hand go down too far. When asked if he was looking at the bowl at the time he put his hand into it, he answered he was “looking sideways,” not looking down into the bowl..

Section 5316 of Williams ’ Code provides as follows: ‘ ‘ Unlawful to ■ employ children under sixteen in what work. — No child under the age of sixteen years shall he employed, permitted, or suffered to work at any of the following occupations or in any of the following positions : Bepairing machine belts, while in motion, in any workshop or factory, or assisting therein in any capacity whatever; adjusting any belt to any machinery; oiling or cleaning machinery or assisting therein; operating or assisting in operating circular or band saws, wood shap-ers, wood jointers, planers, sandpaper or wood-polishing machinery; picker machines, machines used in picking wool, machines used in picking cotton, machines used in picking hair, machines used in picking any upholstering material; paper-lacing machines, leather-burning machines in any tannery or leather manufactory; job or cylinder printing presses operated by power other than’ foot power, emery or polishing wheels used for polishing metal, wood-turning or boring machinery, stamping machines used in sheet metal and tin-ware manufacturing, stamping machines in ’washer and nut factories, corrugating rolls, such as are used in roofing and washboard factories; steam boilers, steam machinery or other steam generating apparatus, dough brakes or crackery machinery of any description; wire or iron straightening machinery, rolling mill machinery, punches or shears; washing, grinding, or mixing mills; calendar rolls in rub *658 ber manufacturing; laundering machinery; dipping, drying, or packing machines; or in mines or quarries.”

The first contention made by the defendant is that this little sausage mill operated in his retail grocery store is not such a mill as was contemplated by the statute; and second, that the plaintiff is an intelligent boy and his action for damages is barred by his own contributory negligence as a matter of law.

Webster’s New International Dictionary, (2 Ed.), defines a “mill” as follows:

“A building provided with machinery for grinding grain into flour; hence, a machine for grinding or com-minuting grain, and, by extension, other material, by rubbing and crushing it; as, a coffee mill; a bone mill.
“A machine for expelling’ juice, sap, etc., from vegetable tissues by pressure, grinding, etc.; as, a cider mill; a cane mill.”

Words & Phrases, Perm. Ed., p. 187, defines a “mill” as follows: “A ‘mill,’ as defined by Webster, has two significations: (1) ‘A complicated engine or machine for grinding and reducing to small particles grain, fruit, or other substance, -or for performing other operations by means of wheels and a circular motion, as a grist mill for grain, a coffee mill, a cider mill, a barkmill. The word is now extended to engines or machines moved by water, wind, or steam, for carrying on many other purposes.’ (2) ‘The'house or building that contains the machinery for grinding.’ State v. Livermore, 44 N. H. 386, 387.”

It will be noted that section 5316 of the Code is directed at occupations or positions rather than to the place where the protected minor is prohibited from working. We are of opinion that the term “mill,” as used in the Code section quoted, includes the sausage grinding mill by which the plaintiff was injured. It is a machine *659 for grinding meat into sausage, operated by electricity, and the plaintiff was employed in “operating” a “grinding mill. ’ ’

The next defense interposed is that the plaintiff was guilty of suet contributory negligence as a matter of law as to prevent a recovery.

It should be borne in mind ttat tte trial judge took tte view ttat plaintiff was not barred by tis contributory negligence and, therefore, submitted tte case to tte jury upon tte proposition. There was a recovery for tte plaintiff, and tte judgment of tte circuit court was affirmed by tte Court of Appeals; hence tte question of contributory negligence was submitted to and passed upon by tte jury.

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W.2d 348, 184 Tenn. 654, 20 Beeler 654, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schilly-v-baker-tenn-1947.