Ziehr v. Maumee Paper Co.

18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 342, 7 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 144
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 342 (Ziehr v. Maumee Paper Co.) 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
Ziehr v. Maumee Paper Co., 18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 342, 7 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 144 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

HULL, J.

This action was brought by the plaintiff, who was an employe of the defendant, the paper company, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained while in its employ. He was injured while working about a machine called a “beater” which was, among other machines there, used by the defendant in the manufacture of paper. The lower part of this machine appears to have been a sort of tub, in which was put the paper to be soaked up in order to manufacture other paper, and the beater was connected with this tublike arrangement and with the power, and was used in beating up the paper that was put in there into a pulp. At the right and in the tub, at or about the top, were two cogwheels, one large one and the other smaller underneath, used in working the beater; and above there was an apparatus consisting of wheels and shafts, which, when in order, was used to throw the beater out of gear and leave the upper cogwheels,, the large wheel out of the tub and thus stop the beater and separate the cogs so th§y were not ■dangerous, and did not revolve after it was thrown out of gear. These -cogwheels were not covered by guards or otherwise, at the time the plaintiff was injured, and had not been for some six months prior thereto, during which time the plaintiff had worked about this machine.

The plaintiff complains that the defendant was negligent in permitting the upper part of the upper wheels, one of them at least, to get -out of repair and broken, so that the machine could not be thrown out ■of gear, the cogs could not be separated, as they could have been had the upper apparatus been in repair; and complains further that the defendant was negligent in having no guard about the cogwheels.

On the day of his injury he was working about this beater and undertook to oil it, going near it for that purpose. The floor was slippery from water splashing out of this and other machines, so that it was kept slippery all the time, practically; and when near the machine, he slipped on the floor and fell forward, one of his hands going between these two cogwheels. The fore finger of his hand was crushed, so that it had to be amputated, and his hand was otherwise injured. He "bases his claim against the company upon the grounds of negligence ■that I have mentioned.

At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, upon motion of the de[344]*344fendant, a verdict was directed in favor of the defendant, it being claimed that whatever negligence had been shown, had been assumed? by the plaintiff continuing in the employ of the defendant; and,, further, that the machine being out of repair, and the cogs being uncovered were not, but his slipping on the floor was, the proximate cause of his injury; therefore, the plaintiff could not recover.

The first ground of negligence set forth in the petition was the one in regard to the upper wheels being out of repair, so that the machine could not be thrown out of gear. It was claimed by the defendant that this did not cause his injury; that it could not be said to have caused his injury; and we agree in this contention with the defendant. The plaintiff testifies that when the machine was in repair,, he had it out of gear a large part of the time; that it was not necessary to have the beater in operation more than perhaps a half an hour in every four or five hours. And he gives it as his opinion that if the-upper apparatus had been in repair, if the machine had not been out of repair at the time he fell, he would not have been injured. He says it was usual for him to throw the machine out of gear when he went to oil it when it was in repair; he also says there was one part of the machine that‘he oiled every hour.

We think it is not at all certain that if the upper apparatus— we will call that the gearing apparatus — had been in repair, that it , would have been out of gear at the time he fell. It is largely guess work on the part of the plaintiff, whgn he says it would have been out of gear at that time; he has no certain knowledge on that question. In order to throw it out of gear he had to go near the machine on the side opposite the one on which the cogwheels were. To be sure, in order to-throw them out of gear before he oiled it, it would have been necessary for him to go near the machine; he might have approached the wheel, had thrown it out of gear on the side where the cogs were, and might have slipped and fell into the cogs at the time he was approaching it for the purpose of throwing it out of gear, in order that he might oil it in safety. So that, to say the mere fact that the upper part of the apparatus was out of repair so that he could not throw it out of gear at that time, was the cause of his injury, would be, it seems to us, mere opinion and practically guess work, not a thing of enough certainty upon which to rest a verdict.

Coming then to the second ground of negligence, whether the plaintiff can recover on account of the cogwheels being unguarded or uncovered in any way, whether that was the proximate cause of his. injury; and if so, whether he had assumed it by continuing in the em[345]*345ploy of the defendant, it is claimed by the defendant that the unguarded cogwheels cannot be said to be the proximate cause of the injury. It is said that he would not have been injured, had he not fallen.

As far as the floor being slippery is concerned, we cannot see that there was any negligence in that on the part of the defendant. It was-practically impossible to keep' the floor from being slippery in doing the work they were doing.

To entitle the plaintiff to recover, it must be made to appear, of course, that the defendant’s negligence was the proximate cause of his-injury. A case that recently went to the Supreme Court from this county is relied on to some extent to support the contention of the defendant, Milner v. Blickley, 70 Ohio St. 429 [72 N. E. Rep. 1162]. In this case, the judgment of the circuit court was reversed anil that of the common pleas affirmed,' without report. Charles Bliekley, the defendant in error, was walking along Jefferson street in this city, along side of the Milner building, a drygoods store. The Milner Company were using an elevator at the side of the sidewalk, for the purpose of hoisting and lowering goods into the basement, and had left an opening in the sidewalk, guarded only on two sides and not on the front toward the street. Bliekley was walking along in the daytime; the sidewalk was slippery, it was snowy and slushy. At about that point he met three women abreast, and, in undertaking to pass them, he slipped and fell and slid into this hole in the sidewalk and was injured. The court of common pleas, took the case away from the jury and directed a verdict for the defendant. That action of the common pleas court was reversed by the circuit court, for the reason that it must have been held that the hole in the sidewalk was the proximate cause of Bliekley’s injury.

There were, however, two objections made, by Milner Company’s counsel, to the plaintiff’s recovery: first, that that was not the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury; second, that Bliekley was guilty of contributory negligence at the time of his injury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 342, 7 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ziehr-v-maumee-paper-co-ohcirctlucas-1905.