Judges: Cottbcy
Filed Date: 12/29/1914
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024
While the plaintiff, a boy of fourteen years, was cleaning the end of a spinning machine in the defendant’s mill, his fingers were caught in the gears and he suffered the injury for which this action is brought. His due care is not in •controversy.
The contention of the defendant is that the jury were not warranted in finding negligence on its part. The bill of exceptions does not in terms purport to state all the material evidence, but we assume that it is all before us, as the' counsel have argued the case on that basis. Viewed in the aspect most favorable to "the plaintiff, as we must consider it after the verdict in his favor, the following could be found to be the facts: The spinning frame
The plaintiff knew nothing about machinery when he entered the defendant’s employ a month earlier. Before his injury he was not aware that there were cogs or wheels in the head of the spinning machine, he never had seen the above described cover taken off, and did not know of its existence. On the morning of the accident he was cleaning the end of the machine in the manner in which he was instructed by the second hand to do it, rubbing over the frame with a brush held in his right hand and then with a rag or some waste held in his left hand. The cover came off on being touched by his left hand; he attempted to grasp it in order to prevent it from falling upon his feet, but missed it; and his
If the jury believed this testimony they were warranted in finding a neglect of duty on the part of the defendant in exposing the inexperienced plaintiff to a hidden peril in work that apparently was not dangerous, without giving him instruction or warning that would inform him of the danger and enable him to perform his task in safety. In view especially of the testimony of the second hand, we cannot say as a matter of law that the defendant by the exercise of reasonable diligence would not have discovered that, by reason of the construction or operation of the machine, the cover was likely to fall off unexpectedly and leave the gears unguarded. Admittedly no warning of such a danger had been given to the plaintiff. Haggblom v. Winslow Brothers & Smith Co. 198 Mass. 114. Halley v. Nashua River Paper Co. 202 Mass. 164. L’Hote v. S. B. Dibble Lumber Co. 203 Mass. 294. Rivers v. Richards, 213 Mass. 515.
In the opinion of a majority of the court the entry must be
Exceptions overruled.