Court Opinion

ID: 6272581
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 15:50:02.38119+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:59:57.353483
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
W. D. Porter, J.,
Louis Valentine, a youth nineteen years of age, was employed by the defendant company and during a part of the time worked at a stamping machine, which at other times was operated by other employees. In order to throw the machine into gear the operator placed his foot upon a treadle when the stamp would fall and rise rapidly, ceasing as soon as the pressure of the foot was withdrawn, unless the machine had become defective. So long as the foot was not on the treadle the die should have remained up. The plaintiff testified that he was engaged in stamping tin cans and had taken his foot off the treadle, the can which had been stamped stuck and, while he was endeavoring to remove it, the die suddenly descended, while his foot was not on the treadle, and severed his thumb.
*456The first specification of error relates to the overruling of an objection, on the part of defendant, to evidence which it is conceded was admissible if the plaintiff’s statement alleged that the machine was generally defective. It is contended on part of the defendant that the statement merely alleges that the machine was defective in respect to the absence of guards. The statement alleges that the machine was defective and without the proper and necessary guards. This allegation was broad enough to warrant the admission of evidence tending to establish any defect in the machine which rendered it dangerous to the operator. If the defendant had desired to limit the scope of the inquiry he should have asked for a bill of particulars. It is evident that the defendant was not misled by the statement, for he did not move for a continuance and went right on and produced evidence touching the very matter to which the testimony of which he now complains related. In fact it is now. contended that the evidence upon this point is so overwhelmingly in favor of defendant that the case ought to have been withdrawn from the jury. The first specification of error is without force.
The second specification complains of the refusal of the court to give binding instructions in favor of the defendant. To such instructions it is asserted that the defendant was entitled upon three grounds, viz : First, that the evidence did not establish the fact that there was a defect in the machine; second, that if the machine was defective there was no evidence of notice to defendant of the existence of the defect, and, third, that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. As to the first of these grounds, it is sufficient to say that it is conclusively established by the evidence that, so long as the machine was in proper order, the stamp could not fall unless the foot was pressed upon the treadle. Thomas W. Burk, an expert, called as a witness by defendant, testified as follows: “ Q. If for any reason the spring did not catch, or if it caught on such a small surface it would slip back, and would not run continuously? A. It might possibly make one strike, it never did it in my time. Q. You never heard, of it doing it? A. No, sir. Q. Did you ever hear of any such machine doing that? A. Sometimes when the machines are worn out and old, they might do it.” The plaintiff testified that this machine did make the one such *457extra stroke which injured his hand. Three other witnesses, Pickering, Hawthorne and Finkensign, testified that this machine had on many previous occasions made such one extra and irregular stroke, and that it had been in this defective condition for several months. This was sufficient evidence to require the submission of the question of the existence of a dangerous defect in the machine to the jury, even though a number of witnesses testified that the machine could not make such an irregular stroke: Sopherstein v. Bertels, 178 Pa. 401. Did the defendant company, or any officer whose knowledge would affect it, have notice of the dangerous condition of the machine ? It is clear that Burk and Heinz were mere foremen of the tin room, who reported to Samuel A. Riebel, the manager of the tin department and baking powder department, and such foremen were mere coemployees with plaintiff. Riebel stood in a different position, to him had been delegated the entire charge of that branch of the business; he testifies that any complaints would have been made to him, and that the officer over him was Malcomb, the secretary and treasurer of the company. The testimony of Malcomb clearly shows that he had nothing to do with the practical operation of the plant, and merely looked after the bills and kept a record of the financial transactions of the company. Colburn, the president of the company, testified that Riebel was the “ manager of the tin department and baking powder department,” and specifically names him as one of the “ executive officers of the company.” All the evidence indicates that the company had placed the entire charge of that branch of the business in the hands of Riebel, he was a vice principal and notice to him was notice to the defendant company: Prevost v. Citizens Ice Company, 185 Pa. 617. Hawthorne, a witness called by plaintiff, testified that he had worked with this machine, prior to the accident, and that he noticed this same defect and that he complained to Burk, the foreman, who in the presence of the witness, told Riebel, the manager. This was sufficient evidence to carry the case to the jury upon that question. There was no evidence whatever which would have justified the court in taking the case from the jury upon the ground of contributory negligence of the plaintiff. Plaintiff had no knowledge of the defect in the machine, and supposed that it could not strike his hand while his foot was off the *458treadle. Tbe defendants even now contend that such a thing was not possible. It would have been error for the court to hold that it was negligence in plaintiff not to guard against that which defendants had led him to believe was a mechanical impossibility. The second specification of error is not well founded.
The third specification is against the action of the court in refusing a new trial for which the judgment will not be reversed in the absence of any abuse of discretion.
Judgment affirmed.