v.
Cedar Rapids Sash & Door Company
The plaintiff was engaged in operating one of defendant’s machines, known as a “sander,” when, as is alleged, his right foot was caught in, a belt, 'drawn through an opening in the floor, and both bones fractured below the knee. The two grounds of negligence-alleged are: (1) In failing to properly guard the rapidly running belt, so that plaintiff’s foot could not come in contact therewith while he was engaged in operating the machine; and (2) in negligently and carelessly using and permitting to be used a belt upon the said machine with -a hole in it.
[*737] Several errors are assigned, to intelligently understand which, references must be made to the facte. The sander is somewhat difficult to describe. It was about four feet high, when the pressure top was down, and something like five feet wide. The pressure top could be raised about twelve or fourteen inches, and will take in forty-two inches of lumber in width, which was fed by the operator between the pressure top and the bed. This top was heavy, weigh-ing about one -thousand pounds, and could not he raised by hand. It was raised by power, which was applied by means of a small lever at the left end of the machine; the operator facing it. This lever worked sidewise -and over u space of about two or two and one-half inches, and was about two feet from the floor. The power to run the sander came from the main s-haft, and thence to the sander by means of belt connections over pulleys at the right end of the machine. It was used to smooth lumber by sandpapering it, pressing lumber against three revolving rollers; the first being covered with coarse, the second with medium, and the third with fine sandpaper. To raise the pressure top, the operator, facing the machine, pushed the pressure lever to his left, away from the machine, and to lower it he pulled this lever toward him a -distance of about an inch and a half. The power lever was at the operator’s right,' and at the right end of the machine. Its lower end was fastened beneath the floor, and it passed through a slot in the floor and stood above it four and oneffialf or five feet. This lever is a strip of hard pine, one and one-eighth inches in thickness, and varying in width from four inches at the floor to two inches at its top, and its purpose was to put on or throw off the power from the sander; the power being applied by pushing the lever to the right, or from the machine, and throwing it off by pulling it -toward the machine. The rollers referred to are connected with three different pulleys at the right end of the machine, and these are turned by belts, which pass from the pulleys through [*738] the floor to the shafting. These pulleys, belts, and the holes in. the floor through which they run. .are covered by a guard, which is “made from an eight or- ten inch board that comes from the floor on a slant to above the pulley, then ranging back over another pulley, and. then down to the floor.” Boards were nailed on the outside from the machine, leaving spaces four or six inches wide, with nothing on the inside, toward tire machine. Slats three-fourths or seven-eighths of an inch thick were nailed to the floor all around the hood or guard, so that it set in a pocket or groove, the depth of the slat. It was fastened in no other way. This description will be better understood by' reference to the attached photograph, which shows the guard set out from the machine.
The plaintiff testified that the first belt conveying power wias directly in front of the power lever, about two and one-half inches from it, and that the front board of the hood stood between these, and about an inch from the belt; [*739] and, further, that: “On the afternoon of the 24th day of December, 1909, just before I was injured, I was putting a door through the machine, and the paper tore. When the paper tears, it gives an unusual noise — clip, clip, clip —very fast, and it is then customary to stop the machine as quieldy as possible, because if the paper should tear and get fast under the drum it is liable to tear the felt or wires in the drum, and so cause a delay of five or six hours to fix it.' On this occasion, I found the paper torn on the front drum. I threw the power off, and discovered that the paper on the front drum was torn. I released the pressure enough to take the door out. When I had the door out, I found that the paper wouldn’t tear, and, in order to release the paper, I took hold of the pressure lever, and found that the power was out. The motion stopped, and I reached over with my foot to the power lever.” After saying that, to “raise the drum and get the paper off, it will be necessary to put the machine in motion again,” he proceeded: “I took my foot, with my hand on the pressure lever and my foot against the power lever, to raise the bed. Q. What occurred then? A. My foot slipped off the power lever against the hood, and threw the hood off, and my foot went in between them. Q. Was your foot caught in the belt, or not? A. The belt caught my foot and drew it onto the floor. My foot was in the slot in the floor, when I raised myself up by taking hold of the power lever and pulling myself up. Q. Where was the guard? A. The guard was right on its side. Q. Were you able to get up yourself ? A. Yes, sir; I did. Q. How did you raise yourself? A. By taking hold of the power lever. Q. What did you discover when you pulled yourself up — did you raise the guard from the floor? A. Yes, sir. . . . ’The belt was at high velocity when my foot got tangled with the belt, which came off. I had to pull the belt out to get my foot out, and I found, after I pulled [*740] the belt up, there was a hole in it. . . . Q. Was your foot in the neighborhood of the hole ? A. Yes, sir.”
The witness testified further that he had been directed by the superintendent to work rapidly, as they wished to get the work then on hand done that evening, as the shop would be closed for a week, though the superintendent denied having told him to hurry, but explained that he did say that the work should be done that evening, even if it were found necessary to work overtime. Plaintiff testified that his foot was on the lever, about eighteen inches from the floor, when it slipped, and that at that time his left hand was on the pressure lever, and his right hand on the table; that he might have stepped over and pushed the lever by hand, but that he had frequently done so with his foot prior to that time; that if the guard not not fallen, his foot would not have gotten into the belt; that his face was toward the power lever when his foot slipped, and instantly, upon striking the edge of the guard, it was caught by the belt; that the hole in the belt was about two and a half inches one way by one-half inch the other. “Q. You do not know whether your foot got caught in that hole, or not ? A. Certainly, I do. Q. Do you mean that your foot got caught in a hole about two and one-half inches long and a half-inoh wide? A. Yes, sir. Q. How do you know that your foot got caught in the hole ? A. Because it was there, and the belt had the edge of my sole in the edge of the hole.”
Whether it would ‘have been practicable, without interfering with the operation and efficiency of the machine, to have attached the guard with a small latch to the floor, or by bracing it to the cupboard in the rear, or by drilling a small hole into the casting forming the side of the sander, and inserting the screw eye therein, and connecting the hook to the top of the guard, was in dispute, as was also the distance from the pressure lever to the power lever, [*741] plaintiff estimating this at sixty-six inches and defendant’s witnesses testified it was 'seventy-eight inches.
There was also a conflict in the evidence as to whether employees, in operating the sander, frequently, when lifting the pressure top with the left hand applied to the small lever, turned on the power by pressing the foot against the power lever, the plaintiff saying that this was done nearly every day, and had been done by him in the presence of a superintendent not then in the factory, and he was somewhat corroborated by another, who had operated the machine ; while the testimony of the superintendent was to the effect that this was improper and dangerous practice; that it had never been observed by him; and that it was impossible for a person of plaintiff’s height, because of the distance between tire two levers, to perform the work in this way, and this testimony was somewhat corroborated by other witnesses. The sandpaper on the drums ordinarily lasted about nine hours, and in changing this it seems to have been necessary, not only to stop the machine, but to remove the guard. So that the guard was removed nearly every day, and sometimes several times the same day.
•If, then, the power lever might properly be moved with the foot, was it enough to set the guard over the belts and pulleys without fastening it, otherwise 'than by the olea-ts, in some way? The evidence in behalf of plaintiff indicated that the guard might have been held in place by a latch attached to the floor, or by a brace back of it. or by a hook attached to the frame of the sander, without interfering with the belting, dr much inconveniencing the handling of the guard; while that on the part of defendant tended to show that these could not have been used, because of the location of the belts, or were impracticable, because of interfering with the use of the guard, which had to be remloved several times a day- — every time a sandpaper on a roll tore, or was worn out. Doubtless any of the fastenings, such as mentioned, would have interfered somewhat with the performance of the work, for the guard must be unfastened before being removed; but this was a circumstance to be taken into account in connection with the probable danger to the employee in operating the lever without having the guard fastened. If the situation was such that, notwithstanding its interference with the rapid removal of the guard, an ordinarily prudent person would have deemed the fastening essential to the protection of employees in the operation of the' machine, then this was required to constitute a proper guard, and defendant was negligent in mat providing such fastenings as would have held the guard in place. Of course, the converse follows, and the evidence was such as to carry this issue, also, to the jury.
We conclude, then, that there was sufficient evidence to sustain the finding that defendant was negligent, in that its belt on the sander was not “properly guarded.”
[*744]
[*746]
We discover no error, and the judgment is affirmed.