Judges: Ellison
Filed Date: 1/6/1908
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
Plaintiff was an employee of defendant and Avliile engaged in working a machine called a “jointer,” was severely and.permanently injured. He brought this action for damages, charging that defendant was guilty of negligence in maintaining the machine. He recovered judgment in the trial court for five thou
Defendant’s answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. As the evidence was of such nature as undoubtedly made the questions of negligence on defendant’s part and contributory negligence on plaintiff’s part proper matters for. determination by the jury, it will not be necessary to set out a description of the machine further than to say that it consisted of knives, about sixteen inches long, fastened into, or onto, a square iron bar which was operated by a belt communicating power from an engine, and that this bar when properly worked revolved with great rapidity, making several thousand, revolutions per minute. The machine was used for planing pieces of board which were held with the hands, flat side down, and pushed over the revolving knives. The immediate cause of the injury was that an employee engaged on another machine requested plaintiff to “dress” or plane a short piece of plank. Plaintiff took the piece and passed it over the knives twice and it not yet being satisfactorily planed, attempted to pass it over the third time, when there occurred a rumbling sound, as the knives struck the piece —and it was suddenly and with force thrown or wrenched from plaintiff’s hands out into the room, one of his hands thereby being brought into contact with the knives and cut off.
The following instruction was offered by defendant under the defense of contributory negligence. The court refused it as offered, but gave it with the word “alone,” which is found in parenthesis: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff when hurt was attempting to pass a board over the revolving knives of a machine called a jointer by causing the board to approach the knives from a direction so that the knives were revolving away from the approaching
The instruction was erroneous and it materially affected the merits of the controversy. The plaintiff charged the defendant with negligence in the maintenance of the machine whereby he was injured. On the other hand defendant charged the plaintiff with negligence. There was evidence tending to sustain both charges and the jury could well have believed that both were guilty of such negligence as directly contributed to the injury. If they did so believe, the verdict should have been for the defendant. But the effect of the instruction was to deprive defendant of this rule of law. For the jury could well say that we believe both were negligent, yet we must find for the plaintiff, since we are directed that in order to find for defendant we must believe that plaintiff’s negligence alone caused the injury; therefore, believing that plaintiff’s negligence was not the sole cause of the injury, but that defendant’s negligence was. also a cause, we find for the plaintiff. In short, the instruction authorized a verdict for plaintiff in a situation where the law forbade such verdict, for where there is mutual negligence the plaintiff fails. [Craig v. Sedalia, 68 Mo. 417, 420; Hogan v. Railroad, 150 Mo. 36; Richardson v. Mesker, 171 Mo. 666; Zumault v. Railroad, 175 Mo. 288; Moore v. Railroad, 176 Mo. 528; Maxey v. Raiload, 95
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.