U. S. Phosphoric Products Corp. v. Lester

156 So. 753, 116 Fla. 309, 1934 Fla. LEXIS 1050
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 19, 1934
StatusPublished

This text of 156 So. 753 (U. S. Phosphoric Products Corp. v. Lester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
U. S. Phosphoric Products Corp. v. Lester, 156 So. 753, 116 Fla. 309, 1934 Fla. LEXIS 1050 (Fla. 1934).

Opinions

Buford, J.

This case is before us to review a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in an action for personal injuries.

The record shows that the plaintiff was' employed as a laborer in a plant where certain blocks for building purposes known as gypsum blocks were manufactured. The content, or material from which the blocks were made is in a large part a trade secret, but it is immaterial in this case. ■ The record shows that the blocks were molded and placed upon a conveyor which was constructed as a belt passing over rollers; that with belt No. 1 they were carried to an opening between the room where they were molded and another room of the plant. At the point of contact between the two rooms there was set up a frame on which were several idle rollers and these rollers were so placed that when the blocks came upon the rollers by the momentum created by the forward movement of the conveyor belt the direction of the movement of the block was shifted so that it went on to another like belt conveyor. The wooden rollers have no significance here. The second belt was also a conveyor for the blocks by which they were carried 'to the place where they were lifted from the belt by workmen and moved to another part of the building. This second belt was operated by rollers on each end which were motivated by electrical motors. The load on the belt No. 2 appears to have been usually 1000 or 1200 pounds. The rollers on which belt No. 2 operated on each end were iron drums. Each was 14 inches in diameter, about 42 inches in circurn *311 ference and 16 inches long. The rollers revolved rapidly. As the blocks entered upon belt No. 2 and were carried along by it to the point where they were taken from it by the laborers small particles of the blocks would chip off and fall off. These particles' appeared to be of different sizes. Some of these particles would land on the belt in such manner as to pass between the belt and the roller, or drum, and these pieces of the material would stick to the drum. When pieces of the material of any considerable size became thus' stuck to the drum it woud' cause the belt to operate unevenly and it was, therefore, needful to keep the drum clean.

The plaintiff was instructed upon such an occasion to clean the drum. He had only been working in the plant a few days and he maintained that the defendant had provided a piece of iron about 14 inches long, 1 inch wide and one-eighth inch thick, having a loop attached to one end thereof through which the hand could be passed; that he slipped this loop over his hand grasped the piece of iron near one end and attempted to clean the roller or drum to which at that time there was a lump of the material about 4 inches long and 2 inches thick; that as he jobbed the lump of material to clean it from the drum the piece of iron stuck and as the drum revolved it drew the piece of iron between the drum and the belt and which, he having attached to his hand, drew his hand and arm between the drum and belt and thereby crushed and mangled his hand and arm for which damage he sued.

The defendant maintained that it did not furnish the piece of iron for the purpose for which it was used and that it did furnish and did instruct the plaintiff to use a piece of plank which was to be held against the roller in such fashion that the edge of' the plank would clean the roller and in the *312 use of which there was no real or apparent danger. The alien allegation of the declaration is as follows:

“Defendant negligently failed to warn plaintiff that the substance of which said gyp blocks were made would as the result of the constant pressure of the belt so densely congeal and become so adhesive or sticky as to be difficult and dangerous to remove while the belt was running, and plaintiff did not know of such danger, nor was such danger so apparent as to cause plaintiff to know and appreciate the risk of his employment with defendant, but plaintiff alleges that defendant knew, or reasonably should have known, the danger to plaintiff of such employment and should have warned plaintiff thereof; that while plaintiff was then and there discharging his duties as such servant of the defendant, and while using said iron implement holding the same in his right hand and was with due care and diligence scraping said mud and debris then adhering to said pulley or drum, suddenly the said iron instrument or tool stuck in the lumps of mud or debris' adhering to said pulley or drum, owing to the adhesiveness of the same, and before the plaintiff could remove it or withdraw his' hand, the sharp or scraping end of said iron instrument or tool became caught between said belt of said section No. 2 and the lower side of the drum of said section No. 2 nearest said space in said conveyor and instantly jerked plaintiff’s hand between said belt and the said pulley or drum.”

The pleas were as follows:

“1. Not guilty.

“2. Contributory negligence.

“3. Assumption of risk.

“4. The defendant denies that it provided the plaintiff with the iron implement or tool described in the declaration.”

*313 The evidence as to whether or not the plaintiff was instructed to use the pieces of iron for the purpose and in the manner in which he used it is conflicting and it may be said that the jury resolved these conflicts in favor of the plaintiff; but we think that the plea of contributory negligence is sustained by the record and, therefore, all other questions raised become immaterial because when this was sustained the plaintiff was barred from any recovery.

The record shows that the plaintiff was' guilty of contributory negligence by placing the loop attached to the iron around his wrist so that he could not free himself from the iron in case it should be caught between the belt and the drum and with the iron so attached to shove it into a place where anyone with ordinary intelligence would know that it might be caught between the fast revolving drum and the heavy belt. The plaintiff knew, or should have known, by the exercise of average intelligence, that when a man was jobbing, shoving or striking the substance which had become adhered to the drum there was great risk of the point of the iron slipping and the force and momentum of the blow carrying it down to a point where it would be caught between the drum and the belt.

We may feel great compassion for the man who was injured, but rules of law have been established by which the rights of men are to be measured and the fixed rule is that in a case of this sort one who is guilty of contributory negligence can not recover damages from his employer for injuries received pursuant to such contributory negligence.

It is not needful for us to go beyond this jurisdiction to find abundant authority upon which to base this statement.

In German American Lumber Co. v. Brock, 55 Fla. 577, 46 Sou. 740, we said:

“A servant in the performance of his duties is bound to *314 exercise ordinary care for his own safety, or that degree of care which prudent persons usually exercise under similar circumstances, and if he is' injured by failure to exercise such care, the master is not liable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 So. 753, 116 Fla. 309, 1934 Fla. LEXIS 1050, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/u-s-phosphoric-products-corp-v-lester-fla-1934.