301 Mass. 76 | Mass. | 1938
This is an action of tort, which was heard by a jury, for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff in the course of her employment by the defendant, who was not a subscriber to the workmen’s compensation law. See G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, §§ 66, 67. The defendant, at the argument in this court, waived its exception to the denial of its motion for a directed verdict. The defendant excepted to a portion of the cross-examination of one of its witnesses — the physician who attended the plaintiff after her injury. There was evidence that after he had obtained some information from her, in his capacity as her personal physician, he gave a written “report,” without her permission, to the “plant” physician. The defendant excepted to a question to the witness whether he did not know that the personal relations and statements between him and any one of his patients were confidential, to which he answered, “Sometimes”; also to the question whether he could tell when they were not confidential, “without the consent of the patient,” to which he answered that he did not know; and to the question whether he had talked about “your patient’s case with her employer’s representatives,” to which he replied that he had. The witness had testified upon direct examination that he was called by the plaintiff and examined her but got no history from her about her injury and did not be
The plaintiff worked on both sides of a series of three “quilling” machines which were set in a row. The power to operate the machines was supplied from a belt which came from the main shafting, twelve to fifteen feet above the floor, to an eight-inch pulley between two of the machines located about three or four inches from the floor. The face of this pulley was sixteen inches in from the alley in front of the machines, and it was twenty inches in bo the shaft to which the pulley was attached. There is nothing in the record to show the distance between the machines in series except that “You could not walk between two frames.” The plaintiff testified that on the morning of the accident, when the power came on, she went for some spools and was putting them on the frame, and while standing there her apron was caught in the pulley; that, to save herself, “she grabbed the apron and started to pull it”; that the “belt was flapping on her shoulder and she fell to the floor”; that the belt had fallen off before her apron was caught; that it took about two minutes to get the power up to full speed; and that the belt came off about three minutes after the power started. The only other testimony as to the manner in which the plaintiff was injured came from two witnesses, one of whom
The defendant requested the following ruling: "8. If the plaintiff was injured on account of being where the defendant could not reasonably expect her to be, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover.”
The defendant has devoted a considerable part of its argument to what it alleges was failure on the part of the judge adequately to instruct the jury on the question of negligence. No exception of the defendant raises any such question, and nowhere in the record is there a suggestion
If an employee undertakes to use machinery or instruments, furnished by an employer, for purposes or in a
We think the eighth request was dealt with adequately. The judge specifically directed the attention of the jury to the question of fact that formed the basis of this request, that is, whether the plaintiff was in the space between the machines or not when injured, and then stated to the jury: “And again I instruct you that, as far as the negligence of the plaintiff is concerned . . . you are not to consider that on a question of her being negligent, because again I say to you that question is not open, the question of the negligence of the plaintiff herself. But you have a right to consider it in dealing with the general question as to whether the defendant was negligent in the situation there as I have instructed you with reference to the contractual assumption of the risk and to any defective or dangerous condition that existed there. You may consider it only in that connection, but you are not to consider it in connection with any contributory negligence upon the part of the plaintiff herself. That is to say, if she was in a place where she ought not to be, whether that would be something that the defendant ought reasonably to expect in dealing with the question of a dangerous and defective condition of the ways, works and machinery there, or the defective condition of the machine.” The evidence presented other material issues besides that which is involved in the request. The judge had pointed out to the jury the difference between the case at bar and “automobile cases” in which the due care of a plaintiff is an issue. He stressed the importance of
We are of the opinion that there was no error in the unusual course, taken by the judge, in reading to the jury in his charge the requests which he clearly stated were not granted.
We have considered all exceptions argued and not waived, and think there was no reversible error.
Exceptions overruled.