Higgins v. Peninsular Portland Cement Co.
Higgins v. Peninsular Portland Cement Co.
Opinion of the Court
The defendant in asking a reversal of the judgment makes a single assignment of error, which is that the court should have directed a verdict in its favor. The duty of the defendant alleged in the declaration is to provide a safe place for its employés, to properly safeguard all gearings and dangerous machinery, to keep its room properly lighted, to instruct its employés in the
“ If defendant were guilty of negligence of any failure to guard the machinery, it would be by reason of some statute; but plaintiff does not rely upon any statute in his declaration, but merely charges defendant with negligence in not safeguarding this machinery. ”
At the trial, defendant offered testimony tending to prove that the factory had been inspected by the State factory inspector at different times, who had examined this particular machinery. He was asked to state whether any guard had been ordered put on the cogs of this particular machine. To this, counsel for the plaintiff objected, saying:
“We are not claiming anything because of any order from an inspector, and they have no right to show that he has or has not ordered it, because the inspector cannot shield them in any way so long as we claim nothing for it. ”
The court excluded the testimony, and instructed the jury as follows:
“ In this case no such question can arise for yoúr consideration as to whether this machinery in question at the place where the plaintiff claims to have been injured might have been safer or safeguarded, because the testimony is
We must assume that the jury found the negligence of defendant to be something other than the failure to guard the gears. Whether there was any breach of duty to light the place, or to instruct or warn the plaintiff, and whether plaintiff’s conduct was reasonably careful conduct, in view of all the circumstances, are questions which remain and may be considered together. The plaintiff was injured a little after noon on April 1, 1905, in an attempt to remove or to replace the cover upon an oil cup which he had filled or was about to fill with oil, his thumb and the first finger of his hand being caught in a gearing which was in close proximity to the oil cup. He was more than »3 years old and altogether had been employed by the defendant from two and one-half to three years at different work about its factory. At the time of his injury, he was fireman and it was a part of his duty to oil certain portions of the machinery and to oil the machinery at the particular place where he was engaged when the injury was received. Plaintiff’s testimony leaves the question of the time he had been employed as fireman altogether uncertain and also the number of times he had oiled the machinery. As an example, the following is quoted from his testimony:
“ Q. You did the oiling for 10 or 1» days ?
“A. Yes, sir, that is what I think it is. I wouldn’t swear to it. I knew it was my duty to do the oiling, and I was doing my duty. I was oiling the bearings there; that is, oiling the boxes, the oil boxes.
“ Q. You were filling the boxes with oil for a period of twelve days ?
“A. Yes, sir.”
“ Q. It was your duty to oil those cups at least twice a day?
“A. No, sir. Didn’t get no orders to that effect.
“ Q. It was your duty to fill them once a day, wasn’t it?
‘ ‘A. Fill them once a week. * * • *
“ Q. Do you mean to tell this jury you received orders to only fill those cups once a week ?
“A. I think that was the orders I got. * * *
“ Q. Do you mean to say you worked there 10 or 12 days and never filled those cups with oil ? * * *
‘ ‘A. To my memory I don’t think I ever filled them before. I might have and I might not.
“ Q. Well, don’t you remember?
liA. No, sir. * * *
“ Q. You mean to tell us this day is the first day you put any oil in those cups, you had never been upon that ladder before ?
“A. I didn’t Swear I didn’t. I might have oiled it before.
“ Q. You might have oiled it twice before ?
“A. .1 don’t think I ever did.
“ Q. Didn’t you know it was your duty — for those cups to be oiled twice a day ?
■ “A. No, sir; I never oiled them twice a day.”
There is testimony tending to prove that he was shown how and where to oil about three days before he was injured. The room in which he worked, called the coal or dryer room, was 30 by 60 feet in size. In the room besides the drag or elevator at which he had formerly worked were two cylinder dryers 40 feet long and four feet in diameter. They are. elevated above the floor of the room. The upper and higher end of each dryer rests upon a cement pier .about six feet five inches high. These cylinders revolve over a fire and are driven by a gearing constructed on the head of the pier. There is a large cogwheel fastened around the upper end of the cylinder which meshes with a small cogwheel underneath the cylinder about twelve and a half or thirteen inches in diameter. The dryer, and of course the larger cogwheel, makes two
In applying the rule that in determining whether a verdict should have been directed for defendant, the testimony will be given a construction and effect most favorable to plaintiff, we have not treated it as a rule which in application supplies facts which the plaintiff either cannot or will not disclose. The record presents a remarkable case of the refusal or the inability of a plaintiff to answer material questions and of repeated instances of what appear to be more or less clever efforts to return evasive rather than responsive answers. We are nevertheless constrained to say that reasonable minds might differ concerning the sufficiency of the instruction and warning (if there was any oral warning) given to plain
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- HIGGINS v. PENINSULAR PORTLAND CEMENT CO.
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