Ready v. Smith & Furbush Machine Co.
Ready v. Smith & Furbush Machine Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The only assignment of error in this case, is that the trial judge refused to affirm the defendant’s single point, viz., “under all the evidence your verdict must be for the defendant.”
The controversy over an alleged variance between the pleadings and the proof adduced on the trial, became immaterial under the admission of the assistant superintendent of the defendant; that the tool or appliance called a “drift,” the breaking of which caused the plaintiff’s injury, was a special and necessary part of a properly equipped machine, such as was furnished to the plaintiff to work at and with, and that it was incomplete without it.
The substituted broken file was not an instrument intended for the use to which it was applied, and was furnished to the workman by the person having authority to furnish tools. The repair boss of the defendant was the right person to inquire of for necessary repairs, and when the plaintiff complained to the person in charge of his department, and asked for a “drift” for use on the machine, and received a tool with which to do the special work, he had a right to rely on the direction given to him, whether declared orally, or in the use of the tool handed to him to effect the particular purpose. The right to use his machine involved the right to use the necessary appliances, whether attached to the machine, or handed to the operator by the repair boss in lieu of a part that had been lost or mislaid. In this case the defective tool was furnished by the only person authorized to supply it.
The fact that a room was established, where proper repair tools could be obtained upon inquiry, was not suf- • ficient to relieve this defendant of liability, as there was no evidence adduced to show that this plaintiff had any knowledge of such a place, which would warrant him in going to the room and taking a tool therefrom. True enough it is, that the room and repair tools were in the building, but the room and repair tools were accessible to the employees only on orders from the foreman or repair boss. Without such knowledge or notice the repair tool room was not available to him.
There was sufficient evidence to justify the submission of the case to the jury, to show that the foreman of the room where the plaintiff worked had charge of the men, the machinery, and the work done therein, as well as being the person to whom orders were given and complaints made.
The case was fairly submitted in an adequate charge to which the defendant did not except. The judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.