11 A.2d 215 | Vt. | 1940
This is an action in tort for negligence in failing to provide the plaintiff, a servant of the defendant, with a safe place in which to work, and in starting an unguarded circular saw without warning to the plaintiff when the latter, by direction of the defendant, was working so near the saw that putting it in motion endangered his life and limb. The accident occurred on September 21, 1937, in the yard of defendant's home farm in Fairfax. Defendant, plaintiff and another employee were engaged in relocating and setting up a wood sawing rig which consisted of a wooden frame and table across the top of which there was an arbor or shaft with a circular saw mounted at one end and a pulley at the other. A tractor furnished power to the saw by means of a belt running from a pulley on the tractor to the pulley on the saw rig.
The saw rig had been moved to the desired location and staked down and the belt placed over both pulleys. It was then necessary to get the tractor in such position that the two pulleys would be the proper distance apart and in proper alinement. After this had been accomplished by such moving of the tractor back and forth as might be necessary the tractor had to be made stationary by setting the brakes or blocking the wheels. Whether the process of alinement and setting the brakes or blocking the wheels had been completed when the accident occurred is in dispute, but it is undisputed that the plaintiff, when injured, had taken a position near the saw in order to direct the movement of a truck which was backing toward the saw to receive a load of sawed wood. While the plaintiff was signaling the driver of the truck with his left arm and hand the arm came in contact with the saw and the injury of which he complains was inflicted. The defendant operated the tractor during the process of alinement from the seat thereon where he was still seated when the plaintiff was injured. Trial was by jury with verdict and judgment for the plaintiff and the case comes here on the defendant's exceptions.
The defendant excepted to the denial of his motion for a directed verdict and to the denial of his motion to set aside the verdict. The grounds upon which he relies in support of both motions are that the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, showed that the plaintiff assumed the risk, and failed to show that he was not guilty of contributory negligence. *126
An extraordinary risk existing by the fault of the defendant is not assumed by the plaintiff unless he knows and comprehends it or it is so plainly observable that he will be taken to have known and comprehended it; then, in either case, he cannot recover. Dunbar v. Central Vermont Ry. Co.,
The burden of proving freedom from contributory negligence was, of course, on the plaintiff, but it was not necessary that the plaintiff should introduce evidence distinctly directed to that matter. The requisite inferences might be drawn from evidence of a more general character. Ryder v. Vermont Last Block Co.,
The defendant excepted to the denial of his motion in arrest of judgment, briefing only the claim that the motion should have been granted because the declaration alleged a relationship *127
of master and servant between the parties to the cause and failed to allege nonassumption of the risk. But the plaintiff by an amendment to his declaration alleged that he "had no knowledge or warning that said saw was to be put in motion while he, the said plaintiff occupied the position in close proximity of said saw, which position he had assumed at the direction of the defendant, and had no knowledge that said saw was to be put in motion by the said defendant until he, the said plaintiff, had removed from said position taken at the direction of the said defendant." Suffice it to say that this was a sufficient allegation of plaintiff's ignorance of the conditions and dangers surrounding him when injured, from which the conclusion of nonassumption of the risk necessarily followed, and it was not necessary to allege that conclusion. Pette's Admr. v. Old English Slate Quarry,
The court charged in effect that the jury might apply the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur in aid of the plaintiff's case. The defendant excepted to that portion of the charge having to do with that doctrine on the ground that said doctrine does not apply to this case; that the evidence in the case shows that the accident was explainable. The meaning of course is that res ipsaloquitur cannot here be invoked, because the evidence in the case is sufficient to explain the accident.
While the authorities are not in agreement as to the circumstances and conditions under which the doctrine may be invoked, and it has been held in this and in other states that if the case is otherwise one for the application of the doctrine, the plaintiff, by pleading the particular cause of the accident, in no wise loses his right to rely upon it, Stewart v. Barre andMontpelier P. T. Co.,
It is true that in Humphrey v. Twin State Gas Elect. Co.,
In the present case it appeared that the defendant, from the seat on the tractor, where he remained, had set in motion both the motor and the saw and that the motor continued to run until after the accident. The plaintiff's evidence was to the effect that the saw had been stopped and was started again, as we have stated, without warning to the plaintiff. The defendant's evidence tended to show that both the motor and the saw *129
were running continuously from the time they were first started until the accident occurred, and that no instructions were given to the plaintiff as to where he should stand or that he should direct the backing of the truck. A clear cut issue of fact was thus presented to the jury. There was nothing to suggest that the saw was or could have been started otherwise than by the defendant's manipulating the starting lever. All the conditions attendant on the occurrence were fully observed and testified to by the witnesses and the case should have been made to depend upon whether the account of the occurrence given by the plaintiff's or that given by the defendant's witnesses should prevail. Baldwin v. Smitherman,
As the case must be reversed it is unnecessary to consider the exception taken to the failure of the court to instruct the jury, in the main charge, that the plaintiff had the burden of showing nonassumption of risk. Neither is it necessary to consider whether this shortage was cured by what was said in the supplemental charge, or if not so cured whether the defendant had an adequate exception to such supplemental charge, since these questions are not likely to arise again.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.