67 Neb. 153 | Neb. | 1903
Lead Opinion
This cause comes here by proceedings in error, prosecuted by the defendant in the court below, against whom a judgment was recovered by plaintiff on the ground of negligence. The negligence alleged was in respect of the operation of machinery used in connection with a steam laundry of which the defendant was proprietor, and also in relation to the manner of instructing the plaintiff how to operate such machinery; he having just prior thereto engaged himself as a servant in the employ of the defendant company for the purpose of assisting it in the conduct of its business. Several errors are assigned by the defendant company, which are in this court urged as reasons for a reversal of the judgment which plaintiff obtained in the trial court, from which, from an examination thereof, as well as of the entire record, we are of the opinion that to dispose of the case properly, we should confine ourselves to alleged errors relating to the giving and refusing to give
At the trial of the cause the defendant requested the giving of the folloAving instruction, which was refused by the court, and error is assigned because of such refusal: "Infants as well as adults assume the.ordinary risks of the service in which they engage; but an infant engaging in a hazardous employment is entitled to a warning against dangers which a person of his age and experience Avould
In a very recent case decided by the supreme court of Iowa (Sankey v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 118 Ia., 39, 91 N. W. Rep., 820) that court recognizes the distinction as to the pleadings required in such cases. The court says (p. 45): “The trial court did charge the jury as to the plaintiff’s assumption of all risks which are naturally or necessarily incident to the service in which he was en
All ordinary risks incident to the employment are assumed, as a matter of law, and are deemed to have entered into the contract of employment. Where negligence is alleged against the master, which he denies, and on the trial of the issue the question of fact to be determined is the alleged negligence, the defendant is entitled to the benefit of an instruction to the effect that the ordinary risks incident to the employment are assumed by the servant, as a matter of law, and without any affirmative plea in respect thereof. Where, however, the defense is the assumption of a risk by the servant not ordinarily incident to the employment and this is relied on as a defense, then it becomes essential that a plea thereof be affirmatively made, in order that the question may be submitted to the jury, as triers of fact, under proper instructions by the court. The defendant in the case at bar, we are satisfied, ought not to be deprived of the benefit of the instruction requested on the ground that it did not plead affirmatively in its answer the assumption of such risk.
It is, however, contended further that because of the allegation in the petition that the servant was not properly instructed in the beginning of his employment as to the risk and hazards incident thereto, the danger of the machinery with which he was working, and cautioned as to how he might avoid injury, — he being young and inexperienced, — and the proof in support thereof, the master was thereby guilty of actionable negligence, and
Because of the error committed in refusing to give the
Reversed.
Rehearing
On motion for rehearing the following opinion was filed April 22, 1903. Rehearing denied:
The defendant in error has filed a general motion for a rehearing. The plaintiff in error has filed a motion for rehearing for the purpose of modifying the language of the opinion, and upon these motions it is urged that it will be contended upon a retrial of the case that all questions involved, save one for which the case is reversed, have been resolved against the plaintiff in error. This was not the intention of the court and we do not think the opinion should be so considered. It was intended to say that it was not necessary to further consider other errors relied upon by plaintiff in error and not discussed by the court, since the case was remanded for a trial do novo, and the language used by the court should be so understood.
Both motions are overruled.