Standard Steel Tube Co. v. Prusakicueicz

23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 133, 15 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 21, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 298
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 133 (Standard Steel Tube Co. v. Prusakicueicz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Steel Tube Co. v. Prusakicueicz, 23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 133, 15 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 21, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 298 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

In this action Walter Prusakicueicz, commonly called, for the sake of euphony perhaps, Walter Brasa, recovered a verdict and judgment in the court of common pleas in the sum of $2,-900 for personal injuries claimed to have been received through negligence of the Standard Steel Tube Company. The injury occurred upon July 23, 1910, while the plaintiff was in the 'employment of said company and engaged in the operation of a certain punch press. This press was connected with power and was operated by ah employe by placing his foot on the treadle which' causes the plunger to descend and punch holes in or cut out pieces of sheet metal.

It was contended by the plaintiff that this machine was out of order and so defective that the plunger would drop without the treadle being pressed and as a result of such dropping, the plaintiff whose left hand was inserted for the purpose of removing a piece of sheet metal, was caught by the plunger and the fingers of that hand were cut off by the plunger descending.

The plaintiff claims that he was inexperienced in this kind of machinery and had only been employed upon the machine for a few hours and that the defendant failed to give him any' instructions or warn him of the dangers. It appears from the evidence that the plaintiff had reported the fact to the foreman that the machine was out of order and .was not working properly and that the foreman had attempted to repair the same and [136]*136reported to plaintiff that it had been repaired. The defendant in its answer denies all negligence upon its part and asserts that the plaintiff himself was guilty of negligence contributing directly to his own injury. These allegations are denied by the reply. The proceeding was brought into this court by a petition _ in error and a bill of exceptions which contains all of the evidence.

Numerous errors are assigned but all of them which appear to be of importance involve the application to this .ease of the statute found in 101 O. L. 195 and following and especially of Gen. Code 6245-1 as amended in said act and found on page 197 of said volume. The contention as made by counsel for the defendant company would deprive that section of any value to the employe in cases of this kind. The manifest purpose of the general assembly in passing this act was to enlarge the right of recovery by an employe against an employer in an action for personal injury caused by negligence and to introduce into the law of Ohio to a limited extent and in a qualified way the doctrine of comparative negligence. It is an attempt to remedy, in so far as employes and employers are concerned, the condition not infrequently experienced by courts in the trial of personal, injury eases where the plaintiff fails because of his own negligence directly or proximately contributing to his injury, although the evidence may ¡show the defendant to have been guilty of a far greater degree of negligence.

This case casts upon the court the duty of construing Gen. Code 6245:1 already cited and that duty must be undertaken in the light of the legislative purpose just mentioned. So far as this court is aware, no reported decision has placed a construction upon that section. The section, so far as necessary to be quoted, reads as follows:

“That in all such actions hereafter ..brought, the fact that the employe may have been guilty of contributory negligence shall not bar a recovery where his contributory negligence is slight and the negligence of the employer is gross in comparison. But the damages shall be diminished by the jury in proportion to the amount of negligence attributable to such employe. ’ ’

Counsel for the defendant have insisted with much ability [137]*137that even though the object of the legislature may have been to accomplish the purpose indicated by the court, that the-language used in the section quoted will not permit that construction. It is urged that the section does not say that in all cases contributory negligence shall not be a bar, and that it only provides that contributory negligence shall not bar a recovery where the contributory negligence of the employe is slight and the negligence of the employer gross in comparison. Counsel argue therefore that in all other cases contributory negligence shall be a bar. Counsel further contend that by the language found in the act, the negligence of the plaintiff is not placed in comparison with that of the defendant. The construction contended for is reached by a too literal and too rigid interpretation of the words used and by overriding the manifest legislative purpose. If this be the interpretation of the section, then it has added nothing to the right of an employe in a personal injury case. Under the law as it has heretofore existed, if a plaintiff’s only delinquency is that he is guilty of slight negligence, -he is not deprived thereby of the right to recover. Such has always been the law of Ohio and the principle is well enunciated in the case of Schweinfurth v. Railway, 60 Ohio St. 215, 220 [54. N. E. Rep. 89], and in Welleston Coal Co. v. Smith, 65 Ohio St. 70, 80 [61 N. E. Rep. 143; 55 L. R. A. 99; 87 Am. St. Rep. 547]. As we construe this statute the negligence of the plaintiff and the négligence of the defendant are to be compared each with the other, and upon such comparison, if it' shall appear that the negligence of the plaintiff is slight as compared with that of the defendant, and that the negligence of the defendant is gross as compared with that of the plaintiff, then the plaintiff is entitled to recovery if the other elements entitling him so to do, are present. The words ‘.‘slight” and “gross” are used as relative expressions. No fixed 'absolute degree of care is mentioned in the statute. The provision is to be construed as if it read, ‘ ‘ The fact that the employe may have been guilty of contributory negligence shall not bar a recovery where his contributory negligence is slight and the negligence of the employer is gross in comparison each with the other.”

We think it perfectly clear that the general assembly in [138]*138this enactment used the words "contributory negligence” as meaning precisely the same as a failure to exercise ordinary care. It will be noted that no comma is found in the act after the word "slight” and this fact confirms the view which we have adopted. Again, if the construction contended for by counsel for the defendant company should be adopted, it would result that the statute enacted for the purpose of enlarging the right of recovery of an employe would actually operate to his prejudice, for it would not allow a recovery in any case where the employe was barred under the former law, and then in cases where he did recover, the amount of his recovery would by the language of the act, be diminished in proportion to the negligence attributable to him.

Counsel for the defendant company places much reliance upon numerous decisions of the courts of Illinois. We have examined those cases with care and many of them bear out the contention of counsel that a plaintiff can never recover in a case of this kind unless he has himself been in the exercise of ordinary eaj.’e. The courts in that state for. many years undertook to apply the requirement to the plaintiff that in order to recover he must have been exercising ordinary care, in connection with the i doctrine of comparative negligence but the later cases in Illinois repudiated the whole doctrine as construed and applied by their courts.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 133, 15 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 21, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-steel-tube-co-v-prusakicueicz-ohcirctlucas-1911.