43 Wash. 149 | Wash. | 1906
Rot some time prior to' the 5th day of October, 1904, the defendant was engaged in operating a sawmill in the city of Seattle. Among other machinery installed and operated in the mill, was a small planer called a sticker. The mill was built on piling about ten or twelve feet above the tide flats, and there was a hole in the floor of the mill about one foot in width and two feet in length on each side of the sticker, through which the shavings and sawdust from the mill were'removed. The shavings and sawdust dropped or were shoved through these holes on to the tide flats and were carried away by the action of the tide. While, the tide was out the shavings would accumulate under the mill and fill up from underneath, so that the holes in question would not be visible from the interior of the mill. Ror about a week or
The grounds of negligence charged were substantially as follows: (1) The defective condition of the. machinery; (2) failure to properly safeguard the machinery; and (3) negligence in failing to warn the plaintiff of the dangerous condition of the platform or floor. The court withdrew the first two grounds of negligence from the consideration of the jury, but submitted the third, under instructions to which no exceptions are taken. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and from the judgment entered on the
The only error assigned is in the ruling of the court denying a motion for a nonsuit at the close of the respondent’s testimony. Three questions are discussed under this assignment: (1) Was the appellant guilty of negligence in the matter complained of? (2) If so, was the respondent guilty of contributory negligence? And, (3) did the respondent assume the risk arising from the defective condition of the floor or platform' ? It is the duty of the master to furnish a reasonably safe place for the servant ini the performance of his duties, and it cannot be said as a matter of law that that duty was discharged by the master in this case. If it was
Hor can it he said, as a matter of law, that the respondent was guilty of contributory negligence.. True, he was aware of the hole on the right side of the. sticker, and perhaps at other places in the mill, but whether he knew or should have known, in the exercise of ordinary prudence., that there was a similar hole on the other side, covered with shavings and sawdust, was a question of fact for the jury. There is no force in the suggestion that the respondent was not in the discharge of his duty at the time he received his injury. He was not familiar with the machinery he was operating, and was clearly in the discharge of his duty, as he understood it, when he steppled to one side of the. machine to ascertain the cause of the difficulty, and remedy it if possible.
Counsel for appellant earnestly insisted in his argument before this court that the accident could not have happened in the manner testified to by the respondent, and that the respondent’s explanation of the manner in which he received his injury is so improbable that the verdict should not he permitted to stand. We do not so view the testimony. If the respondent were walking along the left side of and parallel with the machine, when his left foot slipped into, the hole, the probability of his throwing his left hand into the machine might be very remote. But he was passing along the left ’ side of the machine in an effort to> determine what was. wrong, and may have been facing the machine, moving sideways, when his left foot went into the hole in the floor. If so., it is' not at all improbable that he might throw his hands forward
Finding no error in the record, the'judgment is affirmed.
Mount, O. J., Fullerton, Hadley, Crow, and Dunbar, JJ., concur.