190 Ky. 440 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1921
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Pay McRoy, in whose behalf this action is prosecuted by her statutory guardian, became seventeen years of age in January, 1917. She was employed to operate a handkerchief mangle by defendant, now appellant, in January, 1918, and while so engaged about -a month later was permanently injured by having her hands caught and horribly burned between the rollers of the mangle.
The defendant concedes there was sufficient evidence of causal negligence upon its part to carry that question to the jury and that same was properly submitted by the instructions, and it does not question the size of the verdict, but for reversal insists only that the court erred (1) in not finding, on its motion for a directed verdict, that Miss McRoy, whom for convenience we shall call plaintiff, was guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law, and (2) in refusing to give a concrete instruction on that question.
The same facts are relied upon to sustain both contentions and were stated in a separate paragraph of the answer as a specific plea of contributory negligence thus:
“Further answering herein, defendant states that plaintiff, Pay McRoy, at the time of the accident complained of herein, knew that one of the rolls of said iron
Of these allegations plaintiff denied in her reply only that she knew her hands would be held against the heated roller if they should be caught in the mangle or that she knew the rolls were revolving in the usual manner.
In her testimony she admitted she knew the rolls were revolving but denied that she knew her hands would be held against the heated roller if caught in the mangle.
Hence the only issue upon the trial as to her knowledge of these facts was whether she knew her hands if caught in the mangle would be held against the heated roller. But what she knew about the mangle and the danger incident to its operation bear more directly upon the question of assumed risk, also relied upon as a defense, and there is no complaint, or room for any, that that question was not properly submitted to the jury in the instruction given.
However, what she knew of the conditions under which she was working is pertinent, of course, in connection with what she did, upon the question of contributory negligence.
This she admits in both her pleadings and her testimony, but she explains that while arranging the covering on the lower roll there was some sudden, unusual noise in another.part of the room which attracted her attention and caused her thoughtlessly to look around in that direction from which it came, and that it was while her attention was thus momentarily distracted her hands were caught between the rolls, and that she could not pull them out or work the safety device because of a brick that some one other than herself had placed between the frame of the machine and the safety lever with which it was equipped. No one contradicted her in any of these statements.
The test therefore in this case of whether plaintiff was guilty of such contributory neglect as to bar her right of recovery is not alone what she knew or what she did, since there is practically no issue on these matters, but depends rather upon the legal effect of what she admittedly did when considered in the light of her knowledge, experience and age, and the conditions surrounding her at the time of the accident. And we are by no means ready to say that it was contributory negligence as a matter of law for one of plaintiff’s age and experience to forget momentarily the dangerous character of her work and thoughtlessly turn her eyes aside when something unusual happened in. the room, which caused her involuntarily to allow her hands to be drawn into a dangerous machine her employer put her to operate knowing the safety device with which it was equipped was out of commission, and except for which the accident could not have happened. While plaintiff also knew the brick was in the machine and that it prevented the operation of the safety lever her evidence • tends to prove that she did not fully appreciate the danger resulting therefrom, .since she testified that because of the padding about half an inch on the lower roll she thought she could pull her hands out without injury if they should be caught between the rolls. 'But even aside from
Neither do we reg'ard it necessary to cite authorities to sustain our opinion that plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law simply because she involuntarily permitted her hands to be drawn into a dangerous machine while her attention was momentarily distracted. To do so would not only disregard entirely the thoughtlessness of youth and measure it by the standard of maturity, but could impose upon youth all the hazards of operating a dangerous machine, made extremely so by the carelessness of the master in putting her to operate it with its safety device out of commission, which act of itself would have deprived the defendant of the defense of contributory neglect, as a matter of law under our statutes had she been two months younger than she was when the accident occurred. That the court did not err in denying defendant’s motion for a directed verdict is very clear, it seems to us.
2. We are also of the opinion that the court submitted the question of contributory negligence to the jury as fully and as concretely as the facts justified or permitted. Really this is not a case where a concrete instruction could have been given very easily, since the very conception of a concrete instruction presupposes primary facts in issue, and the only fact in issue here was the ultimate fact of contributory negligence.
As we have tried to make clear that fact in this case did not depend alone or principally on what plaintiff did since she admitted doing all that was charged against her, but rather upon whether or not, under all the admitted facts and circumstances surrounding her, doing what she did, was the ultimate fact, contributory neglect? Ordinarily where the primary facts are not in issue the • question is for the court, but not so here since the question for decision is the conclusion reasonable men ought to draw from relative primary facts not in issue, and this is not a question of law but one of fact, where as here there is room for diversity of opinion among reasonable men.
But even if it be conceded a more concrete instruction could have been given, those offered by the defendant were in effect but peremptories to find for it since they predicated contributory neglect upon what plaintiff admitted she knew and did, and did not make any refer
These were the matters covered by the instruction on the question given by the court.
Finding no error in the record prejudicial to appellant’s substantial rights, the judgment is affirmed.