State Ex Rel. Eckhardt v. Lazaretto Guano Co.

44 A. 1017, 90 Md. 177, 1899 Md. LEXIS 89
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 6, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 44 A. 1017 (State Ex Rel. Eckhardt v. Lazaretto Guano Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Eckhardt v. Lazaretto Guano Co., 44 A. 1017, 90 Md. 177, 1899 Md. LEXIS 89 (Md. 1899).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action was brought under the provisions of the Code for the benefit of the widow and children of Henry P. Eckhardt, who it is alleged died from the effect of poisonous gases inhaled by him while engaged in repairing a leak in the floor of an acid chamber at the fertilizer factory of the appellee in Baltimore City. The cause of action set up in the narr. was the failure of the appellee to provide Eckhardt with a reasonably safe and proper place in which to work, and reasonably safe and proper tools with which to work, the exposure of him to unnecessary risk and danger without warning while at work, and the failure to employ proper and competent co-employees, or to promulgate rules for the government of its employees.

*185 It appears from the record that the appellee has for many years operated its factory where it also manufactured the sulphuric acid used by it in the preparation of the fertilizers. The acid was made in a series of large air-tight chambers lined with lead and connected with each other and with the furnace or burner in which the acid was produced by the application of heat to sulphur or pyrites. Leaks, from time to time occurred in the lead lining to the top and sides of these chambers and they occasionally but not often occurred in the lining at the bottom, which was lined with thicker lead, because it acted as a pan to hold the liquid acid. The leaks were mended by soldering the lead by one of the employees at the factory, who was known as the plumber or lead burner. Leaks in the top or sides of a chamber were repaired from the outside, but it was necessary for the workmen to enter the chamber in order to mend a leak in its bottom. While the manufacture of the acid was in operation the chambers were filled with sulphuric and nitric acid gases, which, when inhaled, were highly injurious to the lungs, and if continuously inhaled were fatal. It was, therefore, necessary when a leak in the bottom of a chamber was to be repaired to “ shut down the chamber,” that is, to stop the flow of acid and gas into it and clear it of that already there to a sufficient degree to make it safe for the workmen to enter it. Even after a chamber has been thus emptied there remains some liquid acid on its floor and such an amount of injurious gas in its interior that the men who enter it to make the repairs are compelled to wear rubber boots and gloves to protect themselves from contact with the liquid acid and are permitted to remain inside but for a few minutes at a time so as to prevent too great an inhalation of the gases remaining in the chamber and those which may be liberated by the agitation of the liquid acid on the floor in the chamber.

The same poisonous gases which are present in such quantities in the interior of the acid chambers are found in injurious quantities in other places about the factory, espec *186 ially at the hot piles where the acid is agitated and mixed and stirred up with phosphate rock. These gases are so well known to be dangerous by the workmen engaged at the factory that they are accustomed when about to enter an acid chamber or to work at the other places where the gas abounds to fasten cotton-waste or sponge, which are kept at the factory for that purpose, over their mouths and nostrils to protect themselves as far as possible from inhaling the gas. The testimony was conflicting as to the efficacy of the cotton-waste and sponge as a protection to the throat and lungs of those who wear it, but the fact that the workmen sought to protect themselves by its use is evidence that the dangerous character of the gas must have been well known to those employed about the factory.

Henry P. Eckhardt was a young man twenty-three years old, of robust appearance, and apparently in good health when the injury occurred, which is supposed to have produced his death. He had been employed at the factory of the appellee for between five and six years at the time of the happening of the events which gave rise to this suit. He did ordinary labor or anything generally that he was called on to do sometimes assisting the plumber or lead burner, one of whose duties was to mend leaks-in the lead lining to the acid chamber.

A leak having appeared in the floor of a large acid chamber it was arranged to mend it on the 12th of November, 1897, and sometime during the morning of that day the manufacture of acid was stopped, and at or near one o’clock Eckhardt and a fellow-workman named Schultz went into the'chamber, through an opening about three feet square cut in its side, for the purpose of mending the leak in the floor. It does not appear from the record under what circumstances they went in or whether or not any warning or directions were given them at the time, or whether they were under any compulsion as to the length of time they should remain inside.

The storekeeper at the factory went to the acid chamber *187 at one o’clock in the afternoon and saw Eckhardt and Schultz, each clad in rubber boots and gloves, inside of the chamber, about six feet from the opening, engaged in making a clay dam a few inches high around the leak in the floor preparatory to mending it. They both came out in two or three minutes after the storekeeper first saw them and Eckhardt was coughing and gave evidence of suffering from the effects of having inhaled the gas inside the chamber. The storekeeper had been compelled to withdraw his head from the hole in the side of the chamber after a minute and a-half because the fumes which he encountered were so strong that they brought tears to his eyes.

It does not appear whether or not Eckhardt again entered the chamber, but about six o’clock in the evening he returned to his home ill and exhausted from the effect of inhaling the gas and the second day thereafter died, and there was testimony tending to show that the inhalation of the gas was the cause of his death.

On the day before entering the chamber Eckhardt procured from the storekeeper a pair of rubber boots, and on the same morning he procured from him a pair of rubber gloves and some soda which is used to neutralize the acid, assigning as a reason that at nine o’clock that morning the acid chamber was to be shut off and he was going to take his turn with the others in going into it to repair the leak. On the same day between 12 and 12.30 o’clock he said to a restaurant-keeper, from whom he got his dinner, that immediately after he finished his dinner he was going into the acid chamber to help to repair a leak. That they would build a dam around the leak so they could repair it, and that it would be a hard job to bale the acid out of the hole and throw it over.

Upon this state of facts, the Court granted the prayer of the defendant, taking the case from the jury upon the ground that there was no evidence legally sufficient to prove that the defendant had violated any of its legal duties to the plaintiff as alleged in the declaration.

*188 The law governing the relation of employer and employee has been the subject of many adjudications and may be said now to be fairly well settled.

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Bluebook (online)
44 A. 1017, 90 Md. 177, 1899 Md. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-eckhardt-v-lazaretto-guano-co-md-1899.