182 Mass. 112 | Mass. | 1902
This is an action for personal injuries caused by the plaintiff’s putting his arm into the beater box of a picker machine in the defendant’s cotton mill, to pull some cotton through the feed rolls, which had collected on the other side of them and had stopped the lower feed roll from working.
A picker machine is designed to clean the cotton, as it comes from the bales. It consists of an endless moving apron, some forty inches wide, on which the cotton is placed; the apron delivers the cotton between two fluted feed rolls, which are in contact; as the cotton comes from the feed rolls, the dirt is beaten out of it by the beaters. The beaters consist of two knives or bars, each attached to a revolving shaft by four arms and distant about eight inches from it. These knives make fifteen hundred revolutions a minute, and, as they come opposite the feed rolls, are a quarter to three eighths of an inch distant from them. As the cotton is delivered by the feed rolls, the
The plaintiff is a Pole, who gave his testimony through an interpreter, and at the time of the accident was thirty-five years of age. On arriving in this country he went directly to the defendant corporation and applied for work. He had had no previous experience in machinery and was set to learning how to run a picker machine under one Doubrouski; after two weeks’ instruction under Doubrouski, he was put to work on a picker machine on wages. The day after he began work, finding the feed rolls clogged by cotton, he tried to free them by taking hold of the cotton in front of the rolls and pulling it back from them. This not being successful, the plaintiff opened the beater box and undertook to pull the cotton through the feed rolls and his arm was cut off by the beater knives.
The danger of having his arm struck by the beater knives, which were making fifteen hundred revolutions a minute and were no more than a quarter of an inch away from the feed rolls, was an obvious danger of which the plaintiff cannot be heard to complain.
The plaintiff seeks to take his case out' of this rule, by showing that, when he was working under Doubrouski, he had seen him clear out a similar clogging of cotton by putting in his arm where the plaintiff put in his arm, and that he never had been told that the machine ought to be stopped when this was done ; and he relies on De Costa v. Hargraves Mills, 170 Mass. 375, in support of this contention. But although in De Costa v. Hargraves Mills the plaintiff was allowed to recover for injuries received while removing a clog from a picker machine in a cotton mill, on the ground that he had not been told that he ought to stop the machine while doing so, it does not cover this case. In that case the plaintiff was removing a clog formed by the dirty cotton in the box where the dirt falls down when the cotton is beaten by the beater knives; there is a space of seven inches between the floor of the box, where the dirty cotton in question
The plaintiff also contends that this ease is taken out of the rule by testimony to the effect that the beaters were going so fast that they could not be seen. But if that is so, it could have been seen that something was going, and the fact that it could not be seen, what the thing was, which was going, only makes the danger more obvious. In Veginan v. Morse, 160 Mass. 143, relied on by the plaintiff in this connection, the fact that there were any knives under the table from which the plaintiff, who was hot hired to work on machinery, was removing shavings was not obvious.
Another argument put forward by the plaintiff is that he never had been told, and did not know, what the interior construction of the machine was; that is disposed of by Robinska v. Lyman Mills, 174 Mass. 432, 433.
The plaintiff’s last contention is that the jury could have found that he was not of average intelligence, and relies in this connection on the testimony of Doubrouskr and the appearance of the plaintiff on the stand. Doubrouski’s testimony was : “ As to whether Mr. Chmiel learned slowly or rapidly, I say he did n’t
We are not concluded from holding that the presiding judge should have instructed the jury that the risk was an obvious one, assumed by the plaintiff, by reason of the fact that the plaintiff was on the stand as a witness and we cannot know how stupid he then appeared to be. The same difficulty arises in case the jury take a view of the premises; but it has been held in that connection not to be an insurmountable one. Tully v. Fitchburg Railroad, 134 Mass. 499.
Exceptions sustained.