Judges: Adams
Filed Date: 12/11/1929
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
The evidence construed most favorably for the plaintiff tends to show that he was employed, not to run the saw, but to crate furniture; that he was inexperienced in the use of the saw and was injured in a few minutes after beginning his work; that the defendant’s general manager ordered him to rip the boards and Eeedy Leonard “to tail the saw”; that the machinery was run by a motor; that the saw was not properly set; that it had no guard; that the teeth were dull and uneven; that it “wabbled and did not run true”; and that the plaintiff could not stand in front of the saw on account of obstructions on the floor.
The plaintiff testified he knew the work was dangerous because the saw had no guard, and that he worked there because he was ordered to do so, and he “was trying to do his duty.”
It does not appear from the record whether the nonsuit was based upon a want of sufficient evidence to prove the defendant’s negligence or upon contributory negligence established by the plaintiff’s testimony. There is some evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant which should be submitted to the jury; and the testimony in regard to contributory negligence is not such as to show that the probability of danger in the use of the saw was so obvious that we should conclude as a matter of law that a person of reasonable prudence would not under the circumstances have continued in the work. Both questions involve matters for determination by the jury. The judgment is
Eeversed.