Turner v. . Lumber Co.

26 S.E. 23, 119 N.C. 387
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 26 S.E. 23 (Turner v. . Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. . Lumber Co., 26 S.E. 23, 119 N.C. 387 (N.C. 1896).

Opinion

The following were the issues submitted to the jury and the responses thereto:

"1. Was the plaintiff injured by the negligence of the defendant? Answer: `Yes.'

"2. If so, did the plaintiff, by his own negligence, contribute to his injury? Answer: `No.'

"3. What damage, if any, is the plaintiff entitled to recover? Answer: `$500.'"

S. S. Turner, the plaintiff testified as follows:

"I was injured 25 September, 1894. I was working for the defendant at Dover. I had worked for them nine days. I loaded cars three days and worked around the planing machine five days. Two of these days I helped a boy take lumber from the planer and put on the cars. They put the boy at something else and left me to take the lumber from the planer. While doing this I got my foot cut, I had been working at the planer four days. Carpenter called me to help pull out a board. One end of the board was in the planer and the other had run out of the planer and was on the bench. About twelve feet of the board was (389) out of the planer. Carpenter told me to go up close to the planer where Ricks was and help him pull the board out. I caught hold of the board — the floor was very slick from shavings and oil — and I set my foot up against a cross-piece on the machine to get a purchase to pull. I saw no danger. When I put my foot up the bits or knives caught it. It was done just as I put my foot on the cross-piece. The cross-piece is an iron that extends from one side of the machine to the other. It is a part of the machine. There are two cross-pieces. I *Page 231 put my foot on the lower cross-piece. The bits or knives caught my foot right above the cross-piece and jerked it up against the upper piece, which caught and stopped my foot. Nearly half of my foot was cut off. There are two knives which revolve on a cylinder. Carpenter was foreman of the shop. Mr. Z. T. Brown, general superintendent of the defendant company, employed me to work. I had pulled boards out of the machine before I was hurt by catching hold of the end, but had never before gone right up to the planer to pull one. The place I usually stood in pulling boards was ten or twelve feet from the machine. In pulling this board I just caught hold there, and Carpenter told me to go up to the planer. This was the first time I ever worked around machinery. Carpenter told me to go to work at the planer. I had before been loading cars. I never had any instructions or warning in regard to the machinery. There is an iron frame in front of the knives, which keeps me, when standing up, from seeing the knives. I thought this frame was a protection against the knives. The knives can be seen by stooping down. I am 23 years old. I was 22 when my foot was cut, 25 September, 1894. I have little education and no business qualifications. My occupation is that of a common laborer. The defendant paid me 75 cents per day. My foot was cut off at the instep . . . . " (390)

Cross-examined: "The cross-piece I put my foot on was two feet from the floor. Carpenter told me to come and help pull out the board. He had hold of it eight feet from the machine and Ricks right at the machine. I caught hold where Carpenter was, and he told me to go up where Ricks was and catch hold. This was all that was said. I knew the knives were there, but thought they were protected. I had been working at the planing machine four or five days. I had seen the front of the machine let down, and I could then see the knives and see where they were. I do not think the shavings hood was bought with the machine. With the shavings hood up I could not have put my foot in. The shavings hood was down when I was injured. I did not take the shavings hood down. I do not remember who took down the shavings hood, but think it was Ricks. He usually took it down. They had been sharpening knives on the machine before 12 o'clock. Carpenter did not tell me not to put my foot up. Ricks had never cautioned me to be careful. Thompson had never cautioned me to be careful about the machine, it was dangerous; but did on one occasion, when I had my hand on the belt, tell me it might hurt me . . . . When I put my foot up to the machine I could see the hole between the cross-pieces. My attention was not attracted to something else, and I was not looking off when I put my foot up."

Reexamination: "Carpenter assisted in adjusting the machine. He would give orders to me and Ricks. He would give orders about fixing *Page 232 the machine. He was the foreman of the shop. Ricks made any common changes needed in the adjustment of the knives. If (391) anything particular was to be done Carpenter would do it."

James Carpenter, a witness for defendant, testified as follows:

"I am foreman of the shops of the defendant company. I have had experience with machinery twenty years and have been with the defendant company thirteen years. The planing machine at which the plaintiff was injured is as good as is made. It is in good shape, and there is nothing defective about it. On the day the plaintiff was injured we were adjusting the machine by putting on extra knives. After putting on the knives we put a board in to run through the machine to see if it was properly adjusted. When the machine started off I told the plaintiff there were extra knives on, and to get out of the way. He stepped back to where he usually stood, ten or twelve feet from the machine. Ricks ran the plank out and called to the plaintiff to help him. Instead of standing where he was he ran up to the machine, caught hold of the plank and stuck his foot into the knives. I saw Ricks catch at his foot to keep it from going in. I did not tell the plaintiff to help Ricks pull the plank out. The shavings hood is made of heavy sheet tin. It is not part of the machine, but the defendant company had it made to be used with the machine for the purpose of catching shavings and carrying them under the machine. The plaintiff had taken the shavings hood down when we started to adjust the knives. It was necessary to take it down for that purpose. With the shavings hood up the plaintiff could not have been injured. I heard the plaintiff say, about six weeks after he was injured and after he had gotten out of the doctor's hands, that it was his own d__n carelessness that caused him to be injured. When the plaintiff stuck his foot into the knives (392) he was looking across the shop at some colored men. His foot did not strike the cross-piece at all. The cross-piece extends three inches below the knives."

Cross-examined: "A man named Faucette was injured about four years before, while in the employment of defendant, by another machine with a front just like this, and with knives that worked the same way and were protected the same way. Faucette slipped on the floor and his foot caught in the machine. (This evidence was objected by defendant; overruled; excepted.) The machine was operated at Goldsboro without a hood. I did not caution plaintiff when he started to the machine. I cautioned the plaintiff at other times besides the day he was injured to be careful."

Redirect: "We were simply running a plank through the machine to see if the knives were properly adjusted." *Page 233

Wm. Ricks, a witness for defendant, testified as follows:

"I have been in the employment of the defendant seven years, running a planing machine. The machine by which the plaintiff was injured was a good standard machine. There was no defect in it. The shavings hood was not a part of the machine. It was made to keep the shavings from falling on the floor, and to aid in carrying them off. With the hood up it was impossible for his foot to get into the knives. The plaintiff took down the hood when we started to adjust the knives.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 S.E. 23, 119 N.C. 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-lumber-co-nc-1896.