Rondeau v. Sayles
Rondeau v. Sayles
Opinion of the Court
It appears by the plaintiff’s testimony that at sixteen minutes before six o’clock, on the evening of December 11, 1905, the plaintiff, an employee of the defendants, and then of the age of fourteen years, was engaged in shifting, with his left hand, a belt from a fixed to a loose pulley, in accordance with instructions theretofore given him by the defendants’ overseer, preparatory to the closing down of the mill for the night; and that, while so standing between the third and fourth machines in a certain row, in a passageway twenty-one and one-half inches in width, all the light in the room, which was furnished by an electrical plant owned and operated by the defendants, was instantly extinguished without warning of any kind, and before the usual hour, and contrary to the long established custom of a premonitory signal given five minutes in advance. It was so dark on that day in that room that it had been found necessary to turn on the electric light an hour and a half before the time of the accident, and the sudden extinguishment of the light caused total darkness. It was as “dark as pitch,” as one witness expresses it. Though the plaintiff was using his left hand on his work in this narrow space between moving belts and machines in operation, in withdrawing his hand therefrom as the light was extinguished, his right arm was, in this sudden darkness, caught in the gearing of the fourth machine — a machine adjoining the 'one on which he was employed — and this right arm was crushed and mangled and torn from his body, and the plaintiff rendered unconscious. At the trial the plaintiff was nonsuited, and the case is here on exception thereto.
Exception sustained, and case remitted to the Superior Court for a new trial.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Charles v. Rondeau vs. Albert A. Sayles, Et Al.
- Status
- Published