189 Mass. 529 | Mass. | 1905
This is an action of tort for injuries sustained by the plaintiff while in the employ of the defendant. At the trial in the Superior Court the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff; and the case is before us on the defendant’s exception to the refusal of the presiding judge to rule that there was no evidence which would warrant a finding for the plaintiff. The plaintiff was employed to run eight looms, four in a row on each side of a narrow alley. While at work at the fourth loom in one row, he was struck in the eye by a shuttle with the usual
Both the plaintiff and the defendant knew that, from one cause or another, a shuttle sometimes leaves, or attempts to leave, a loom in operation, and that the function of the guard, which is placed on all looms, is as above stated. The guard consists of a piece of metal, about one quarter of an inch in diameter and of the length of the path of the shuttle between the two shuttle boxes, which length is practically the width of the body of the loom. The guard is parallel with the hand rail, and, when of proper length and construction and in proper position and adjustment, is for most of its length nearly the width of a shuttle distant from the hand rail; but toward each end it turns at right angles to the hand rail, then runs closer to and parallel with the hand rail toward the ends of the loom, and at each end a loop is formed to receive a bolt which runs through the hand rail and is tightly fastened by a nut. Often there is a leather strap around a guard at its centre screwed to the hand rail. The guard should be directly over the outer portion of the path of the shuttle as it flies along the race board from one side or shuttle box of the loom to the other.
The plaintiff contends that at some time before the accident the old guard became broken, and the plaintiff having called the attention of the loom fixer of his section to the fact, the loom fixer put a new shuttle guard on the loom, from which the shuttle flew which caused the accident, and that such new guard was too long and for that reason “bellied out.”
On direct examination the plaintiff testified that he was twenty-eight years old; that he learned to weave when fourteen years old, then worked as a weaver about a year, and subsequently, about ten months before the accident, resumed the occupation on the eight looms above mentioned. At the request of his counsel, using a model, he explained the names and functions of some of the parts at the front of a loom, illustrating its forward and backward movements and the way in
The plaintiff further testified that it is no part of a weaver’s work, when the loom stops at these intervals, to examine any of its parts; that about three or four weeks, perhaps two, before his injury, the old shuttle guard broke right on the end where the bend is; “I think it was broke right where it had been struck a time or two with the shuttle or something like that ”; that he called the fixer in charge of that section, whose duty it was “to receive reports of the breaking of things, including the shuttle guard, and to remedy or replace a broken part,” and
The plaintiff’s work at the loom consisted of tying broken threads, changing the filling, by which is meant putting a new cop on the shuttle, and keeping the loom running. When anything happened to a loom the plaintiff called the loom fixer to attend to it, and worked on his other looms while the loom fixer was at work.
One McFarlane, a witness for the plaintiff, corroborated the testimony given by the plaintiff, and further testified that the proper distance between the hand rail and the shuttle guard is about an inch and a half or an inch and three quarters, about a quarter of an inch narrower than a new shuttle. “ When a shuttle guard breaks and a necessity for a new one thus arises, it is the duty of the loom fixer to go to the machine shop and get a new one of the same kind and bolt it through the old holes in the hand rail, seeing that it comes square and that it is of the right length. If he selected or was given one longer than the old one, if he simply put it on through the old holes and did nothing else to it, it would spring in the centre, what loom fixers call ‘ bellying.’ It would belly out. While the fixer is putting on a new guard, the weaver goes along working on his other looms, not assisting the fixer in any way. When through, the fixer starts the loom and goes away.” He further testified that after the accident he went to the loom in question ; that he “ noticed the guard being opened out and space enough for the shuttle to come through it ”; and that “ it is the business of the loom fixer to know if a guard is of the right length.”
Ford, who was the loom fixer of the defendant in the section where the plaintiff worked at the time of the accident, was called by the plaintiff, and in some respects coi’roborated the testimony of McFarlane; in other respects, as the defendant contends, he gave evidence more favorable for the defendant. It is unnecessary to repeat it here.
The defendant contends that there was no evidence of the-defendant’s negligence; that the plaintiff assumed the risk; and that the plaintiff was not in the exercise of due care. We are of opinion that, upon the evidence, the judge properly refused' to take the case from the jury; and that it could not have been ruled, as matter of law, that there was no evidence which could', have warranted a verdict for the plaintiff.
On the question of the defendant’s negligence the only contention of its counsel is that there was no evidence that the-guard rail was too long, and it- is suggested that the bend in-the guard rail might have been caused by the plaintiff’s taking-hold of the hand rail to pull the loom forward, or the guard, might have been bent by being struck by a shuttle shortly-before the accident. It cannot be said that there was no evidence that the guard rail was too long, when a loom fixer of eighteen years’ experience testified as we have above stated. As-to the suggestion that the accident might have been caused by the plaintiff’s taking hold of the hand rail to pull the loom forward, there is no evidence that he did so, and the testimony of the plaintiff is to the contrary. As to the other suggestion, the answer is that this, if true, would show that the guard rail had become bent by shuttles striking it, which might have been discovered on proper inspection by the defendant or the officers to whom it had entrusted the duty of inspection. So far as the evidence discloses there was no system of inspection in the mills of the defendant, and this would be evidence of negligence, if
The next contention of the defendant is that the plaintiff assumed the risk; but we are of opinion that, on the evidence, the question was for the jury. The risk was not an obvious one. The rule of law as to assumption of the risk does not apply where there is negligence on the part of the master in furnishing suitable instrumentalities for doing the work. Boucher v. Robeson Mills, 182 Mass. 500, and cases cited.
The last contention of the defendant is that the plaintiff was not in the exercise of due care. We are of opinion that this question was for the jury. The plaintiff testified that he did not know that there was anything wrong about the shuttle guard. This is not a case where it can be said that the plaintiff, in the exercise of reasonable care, must have known of the defect in the guard. It was undisputed that he had charge of eight looms, each loom making one hundred and eighty or one hundred and ninety picks a minute; that the shuttle in each loom had to be taken out and supplied with a new cop once in three minutes; and that other details, such as the breaking of threads, also required his care. All these facts show that the plaintiff’s time was occupied in various matters, and it could not be ruled as matter of law that the plaintiff was not in the exercise of due care.
Exceptions overruled.