Simpson v. Phillipsdale Paper Mill Co.

227 Mass. 430
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 26, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 227 Mass. 430 (Simpson v. Phillipsdale Paper Mill Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simpson v. Phillipsdale Paper Mill Co., 227 Mass. 430 (Mass. 1917).

Opinion

Crosby, J.

This is an action to recover for personal injuries received by the plaintiff, while in the employ of the defendant, by falling through a trap door or opening in the floor of the defendant’s mill at Phillipsdale in the State of Rhode Island.

The plaintiff is a mechanical engineer of large experience. [432]*432His principal duties, while in the employ of the defendant, were to superintend and complete certain new construction, and to put and keep the machinery in first class condition to the end that the mill would be operated with the highest degree of efficiency.

The mill was a two story structure, three hundred and eighty-seven feet long and sixty-six feet seven inches wide, consisting of a first floor and basement. The first floor was one room of substantially the above dimensions, with no partitions in it; on the west side was a paper-making machine from one hundred and fifty to one hundred and seventy-five feet long and from eight to ten feet wide; through the centre of the room from north to south was a row of posts ten inches square, from ten to twelve feet apart, extending from the floor to the ceiling. The room was well lighted by large windows on its east and west sides.

A travelling crane was located in the room, with which rolls of paper were carried from one part of the room to another. Most of these rolls were thirty-six inches high and varied from, thirty to thirty-six inches in diameter and weighed from four hundred to five hundred pounds. When the manufactured paper comes from the machines, it is wound on the rolls, and after leaving the winder the rolls are strewn around the floor on the west and south sides of the room. A short distance east from the line of centre posts and thirty-four feet from the south end of the room was a hatchway or opening in the floor, six feet and eight inches square. The floor boards had been sawed away to make this opening and those taken out were made into a cover or trap door; they corresponded with the boards in the floor in color and thickness; there was a ring countersunk in the door by which it could be raised, but there were no hinges upon it; the saw cut was from one eighth to one fourth inch in width.

There was evidence that dust that came from felt rolls could get into the saw cut in such a way that it could not be seen. There was also evidence that by reason of trucking across the door the ring could not be seen unless a person looked for it closely.

On the day of the accident the door had been removed and rolls of paper were lowered by the crane to the basement. Whether the door had ever been removed before, while the plaintiff had been in the defendant’s employ, was in dispute, and the evidence upon that fact was conflicting. Certain witnesses [433]*433testified that rolls of paper had been lowered to the basement through this opening two or three times a week up to the day of the accident, while others testified that the cover had never been removed before that day while the plaintiff was in the defendant’s employ.

The plaintiff testified “that there was not any lines or marks of a trap door in the floor that he saw: that he saw nothing that would tell him that there was a trap door there; that he never saw, a ring or a hook or anything of that sort in the floor; that there was no difference in the color or in the demarcation of color in that part of the floor; that no one had ever told him there was a trap door there; that he has had a good deal of experience in factories of this sort; that he had never known of a trap door in such a place as that in a factory.”

The plaintiff entered the defendant’s employ on March 6, 1911. The accident occurred on June 3, 1911. Between these dates he testified that he had been all through the building and had frequently passed through the room where the trap door was located, but did not know it was there until after he was hurt.

On the day of the accident the plaintiff was notified that the crane was out of order. He went up the stairway to the room where it was to direct its repair, which was a part of his work. Two men were working upon it at that time. He testified that he “started to walk from the head of the stairs toward the crane carriage, treading his way, following in between, in and out among the rolls, and glancing at the, rolls; that he saw the general layout and saw where he could pick a way in between; that his objective was the crane, and he glanced at the crane from time to time; . . . that as he came up that was what he chiefly had in mind, the crane carriage; that as he went along he did not necessarily keep his eyes on the crane, he couldn’t separate one from the other; that as he remembers it, he started to walk toward it;” “that the next he knew after' he was picking his way among the rolls, the next he recalls is that he woke up in bed. . . .”

The defendant offered evidence to show that at the time of the accident the opening in the floor was guarded properly by the rolls of paper being piled around it. On the other hand there was evidence from which it could have been found that at that time the rolls were scattered around upon the floor as on pre[434]*434vious occasions; that there was no unusual arrangement of them, and that the opening in the floor was not so guarded. There was evidence that near the edge of the opening upon the side from which the plaintiff approached it, there was a space of about eighteen inches between a roll of paper and one of the upright posts through which the plaintiff passed just before he fell.

Upon all the evidence it could not be ruled that the plaintiff was not in the exercise of due care because he had not seen the trap door which he had passed over on previous occasions; he was not guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law because he failed to notice the opening in the floor in time to avoid falling into it.

While the plaintiff could not be found to have been in the exercise of.due care, if, without using any precautions to protect himself from harm, he walked into the opening, it is to be noted that as he walked across the floor his intention was directed to the crane; he glanced from time to time to the place where he was walking among the rolls, and also in the direction of the crane, repairs upon which it was his duty to direct. Under these circumstances the question of due care wife for the jury.

The defendant contends that, because the plaintiff is unable to recollect what occurred up to the moment of the accident, what happened is a matter of conjecture, but we cannot agree with this contention. The physician who treated him for his injuries testified that a person receiving a severe blow on the head, as the plaintiff did, ordinarily loses the recollection of everything occurring immediately before the blow.

There was evidence that the men working on the crane, carriage saw him coming toward them when he was about ten feet from the hole. It is a fair inference from the testimony that he was walking toward the crane when he fell, indeed the defendant does not contend to the contrary. If he failed to show that he was looking upon the floor every step he took so as to be. sure that there was no opening in it he was not guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law. Falardeau v. Hoar, 192 Mass. 263. Johnson v. Field-Thurber Co. 171 Mass. 481. Hogarth v. Pocasset Manuf. Co. 167 Mass. 225. Hannah v. Connecticut River Railroad, 154 Mass. 529.

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Bluebook (online)
227 Mass. 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simpson-v-phillipsdale-paper-mill-co-mass-1917.