70 So. 193 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1915
The machine consisted of an iron kettle, some 3 feet in diameter, which rested upon iron legs screwed to the floor, and was about 2y% feet high. Inside of the kettle there were two sets of paddles or knives, which, when the machine was being operated (which was done by electric power), turned or revolved something like the center piece in an ice cream freezer. The top of the kettle or mixer was uncovered or open, and through it the knives or paddles were visible, except when the kettle was full. Plaintiff, who had been working at the machine several months, admitted that she had seen the knives or paddles and knew that they were in the kettle. Near the bottom of the kettle, and just above where it was joined to the legs on which it rested, there was an opening in the side of the kettle for the chocolate that had been mixed therein to run out. The opening was circular in form and about 2*4 inches in diameter, covered with a small metal gate or door, that was opened and closed by a thumb or hand piece from the outside which worked the latch. Plaintiff had nothing to do with the operation of the machine. Her only duty with respect to the machine was to draw out the mixed chocolate into vessels through the opening mentioned. On the occasion of the accident, when she lifted the latch and opened the metal door or gate to this opening, the chocolate did not run
The distance from the outside of the opening to the inside of the kettle where the knives or paddles revolved was about 3y% inches, but plaintiff says that, although she knew the knives or paddles were revolving in the kettle, yet she did not know that they revolved that near the outside surface of the opening mentioned, or as low down in the kettle as was the opening. It does not conclusively appear that she could have made this discovery, even if she had at any time looked in from the open top of the kettle. She says that frequently before this she had removed the frozen chocolate from the opening with her fingers and received no injury, and that, while she was never told to do so, no one ever told her not to do so, or suggested or provided other means for removing the frozen chocolate from the opening.
While it does not conclusively appear that defendant knew that plaintiff was in the habit of removing the frozen chocolate in the way mentioned, yet defendant’s superintendent, Gilmore, admitted that he had seen the other girls in the factory, who were engaged there in the same capacity as plaintiff, remove the frozen chocolate from the opening mentioned with their fingers, and that he had reproved them for so doing, but that at that time plaintiff was some six' feet away and he does not know that she heard the reproof, as the running machinery was making so much noise. She testifies that she did not hear the reproof, and the negligence she relies on for recovery is the failure of said superintendent to warn her of the danger of running her fingers into said opening.
It appears that plaintiff was an intelligent young white girl, 18 years of age, at the time of the accident, but that the only experience she had ever had at work before being employed by defendant was a short time at a cracker factory, and that defendant’s superintendent had known her all her life, and the evidence afforded some basis for an inference that he knew the extent of her experience.
We find nothing in our application of the principles stated to the facts of the case at bar, in holding that the court did not err in refusing the affirmative charge for defendant, to conflict with the application of them as given by our Supreme Court in the cases of Brammer v. Pettyjohn, 154 Ala. 616, 45 South. 646, 129 Am. St. Rep. 71, and Warble v. Sulzberger Co. of America, 185 Ala. 603, 64 South. 361 (cited by appellant), and where the court held the affirmative charge to be proper. The facts and circumstances with which the court was dealing in those cases are so different from those here, which will so fully and clearly appear from an examination of those cases, as to relieve the necessity, we think, of distinguishing them by a discussion, from the case at bar.
With respect to both of these charges, as well as with respect to those parts of the oral charge of the court that were excepted to, we may quote as appropriate what was said by our Supreme Court in condemning similar charges in the case of Alabama Mineral R. R. Co. v. Marcus, 115 Ala. 389, 22 South. 135, to-wit: “Too much prominence was given by the court below in its charges to the jury to the fact that the plaintiff was a minor at the time he received the injuries of which he complains, in view of the further fact that he was approaching his majority, being about 19 years old, and was fully matured physically and mentally for one of his age, or, more accurately speaking, perhaps, the court unduly obscured these latter facts. A minor upon entering contractually upon a'given service assumes the risks thereof as fully as does an adult; and the mere fact of minority does not, of and in itself, necessarily impose upon the master any other or greater degree of care in respect of the minor than would be upon him had the servant attained full age. It is the immaturity of mental and physical faculties and capacity, which is incident to some minors, but not all, but not the mere fact of minority, which the master must have special regard for; and where in a given instance of minority this immaturity is wanting, the minor stands upon the plane of adults. On this view, charges 8 and 11 given for plaintiff, and perhaps others so given, and also certain declarations in the charge given ex mero motu to the jury, were faulty.” .
In the case of King v. Woodstock Iron Co., 143 Ala. 632, 42 South. 27, our Supreme Court also said:
“The intestate, being 18 or 19 years of age, is presumed to have been of sufficient intelligence to assume the risk of the employment to the same extent as if he was 21, and if he was*319 inexperienced, and needed special instruction, that was a matter ~to be shown by evidence on the part of the plaintiff.—Williams v. S. & N. R. R. Co., 91 Ala. 635, 9 South. 77; Lovell v. DeBardelaben Coal & Iron Co., 90 Ala. 15, 7 South. 756.”
And defendant separately and severally excepted to the following portions of the foregoing portion, to-wit: (1) “It is the duty, gentlemen, I neglected to say, of any one employing an inexperienced person, particularly a minor, or young person, to warn or instruct such person, if employed, whose employment would require either working with a dangerous piece of machinery or in a dangerous place.”
(2) “And if such machinery is dangerous, or of such a character as to involve an element of danger in and about working with this character of machinery, it would be the duty of the person so employing such inexperienced or youthful person, to warn or instruct them, call their attention to the nature, and the character of the machinery, and the dangerous elements, if any, to be come in contact with, and to be avoided, and it would be negligence in such a person, so employing, a superior, such as a superintendent, as charged here, under such circumstances to fail to so warn or instruct such a person.
The exceptions were well taken, as it will be observed that each portion excepted to pretermits a consideration by the jury of the obviousness of the danger, as well as knowledge on the part of the master of the servant’s inexperience. We have here-'
We find no other error in the record. For those pointed out, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.