This is a suit to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by reason of the negligence of the plaintiff’s employer. The substance of the petition, so far as material, is as follows: The plaintiff was employed by the defendant company in its' cotton-gin.- His work consisted of attending to the lever of the press used in the baling and pressing of cotton. The press had a maximum capacity of 500 pounds. On the day of his injury the defendant' put into the press a bale of cotton weighing 530 pounds. The plaintiff, in the discharge of his duty, took hold of the lever and unhooked it, where it was fastened near the bottom of the press by means of a link, but after he had unfastened it and while he was holding it in his hand for the purpose of letting it .assume a horizontal position, so that the pressure and tension thereon might be released and the hook be detached from the link and the bale be released from the press, the lever suddenly, instantly, and powerfully, and without any warning to him, jerked loose from his hand, flew upwards, and struck him on the chin, knocking him clear of the floor a distance of sixteen feet, and in
The plaintiff substantially proved these facts, and also proved that there had been no change in the press during the two years in which he had been running it, and in which it had been in his charge. He proved also that there was nothing to prevent him from seeing the alleged defects in the hooks, some of his witnesses testifying-that he was necessarily compelled to handle each of these hooks every time he operated the press; that the inside of the hooks would fall directly under his eye every time he operated it. He testified that the tendency in every instance was for .the lever, to fly up just as it did when he was injured. As to this he said:. “I guess the lever would fly up if you were not to hold it anyway. If you were just to turn the lever loose at first, before you loosened the door, it would fly up. Then the reason you put both hands on there when
The foregoing statement is sufficient for an understanding of the rulings announced in the headnotes.
Judgment affirmed.