201 P. 575 | Mont. | 1921
delivered the opini.on of the court.
Plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for an injury to his right forearm through the alleged negligence of the defendant. At the trial the court sustained defendant’s motion for nonsuit. Judgment was entered accordingly. Plaintiff has appealed.
On December 12, 1917, plaintiff and four or five others, employees of the defendant, were by direction of John Hughes, defendant’s manager and foreman, engaged in sawing its' yearly supply of stovewood. They were using a circular saw, mounted on a frame and propelled by a gasoline engine. The foreman was not present at the time, and had given these employees general directions to saw up a pile of wood which had been hauled in, consisting of sticks of different sizes and lengths, varying from five to fourteen inches in diameter and from five to twenty feet in length. In giving his directions, the foreman did not assign to each of the employees his particular part of the work. When work began, the plaintiff chose to perform the duty of sawyer. The sticks were passed from left to right by the others, who placed them upon a swinging table or carrier attached to the saw frame, and assisted the plaintiff to pass them along the carrier and to hold them in place while he moved them against the saw. The sticks were cut into fourteen inch blocks, one of- the other employees carrying them away as they were cut off. The saw was about thirty inches in diameter. Some of the sticks wbre so large that it would not cut them entirely through, and it was necessary to turn them over and saw them on the other side. The saw and engine stood in the yard, and were not under shelter of any kind to protect
The complaint alleges that the defendant was negligent in not having the saw frame equipped with a guard or other safety appliance, in not providing a shelter to protect it and the, ground from snow and ice, and in requiring plaintiff to cut sticks of the length and size of those he was required to cut, in that the saw was designed only for the cutting of cordwood, and in that, though it knew, or in the exercise of ordinary care and diligence should have known, of all these conditions, the plaintiff did not know and had no means of knowing the danger to which he was exposed.
One of the grounds for nonsuit was that the evidence introduced by the plaintiff disclosed, as a matter of law, that he assumed the risk of the danger incident to the work in hand. Whether he did or not is the only question submitted for decision.
The rule is well established in this jurisdiction that the de
The plaintiff was the only witness who testified to the cir-
The undisputed evidence does not furnish the basis for any other conclusion than that the plaintiff assumed the risk. Independent of a statutory requirement, it is not negligence per se for an employer to leave his machinery uncovered or otherwise unguarded. Whether this constitutes negligence depends upon the circumstances of each particular case, the nature of the work, the degree of exposure, and the knowledge which it appears the employee had of the existing conditions. (26 Cyc. 1133, 1134.) Being a mature man and having had ample opportunity to observe, the plaintiff knew that the danger was greater than it would have been if the machine had been provided with a guard. He knew that snow and ice were on the ground, and, having lived in Montana where there is much snowfall, he is presumed to have known that his footing was rendered less secure by it. The pile of wood was in plain view when he went to work, and if, in fact, the machine was not adapted to the sawing of sticks of the size he was required to saw, he had ample opportunity
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.