20 Pa. Super. 234 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1902
Opinion by
The plaintiff, a boy fourteen years of age, had been employed about the works of the defendant company for almost two years prior to receiving the injuries out of which this case arose. He had first worked at picking slate, which employment did not bring him in contact with the machinery by which he was subsequently injured. About two months prior to the accident the plaintiff was put to work at cleaning the dust chutes, but in that occupation there was nothing to familiarize him with the operation of the machinery. About a month before the accident, the plaintiff was directed to discharge the duty of keeping
The defendant conceded that the character of the work was such as to require the instruction of an inexperienced employee, and called a number of witnesses to prove that such instruction had been given. This raised a question of fact upon which the evidence was directly contradictory, and the determination
A. careful review of the testimony has failed to convince us that the danger involved in the employment was so visible and immediate that, in the absence of instruction, the plaintiff must be presumed to have been guilty of contributory negligence in the manner in which he did the work. While it must be conceded that it was somewhat dangerous to remove the coal from directly under the screen while the latter was in motion, it can hardly be said as matter of law to have been so imminently dangerous, that no prudent person would do so, because the plaintiff testified that he did do this work for an entire month. The contributory negligence of the plaintiff was, in view of his inexperience, a question of fact for the jury: Bennett v. Standard Plate Glass Company, 158 Pa. 120; McKeever v. Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company, 194 Pa. 149.
The judgment is affirmed.