167 Mass. 61 | Mass. | 1896
We are to take it that the plaintiff was injured by the spattering of a mixture of gum and caustic soda into her eye from a machine at which she was working, and that she knew of the tendency of the machine to spatter, and had complained of it. The only question is, whether she knew of the danger to eyesight in case the soda got into her eye. If she did not, and if the defendant had no right to assume that she did, she was entitled to go to the jury. She certainly testified that before the accident the soda burned her face, and that it stained and sometimes made holes in her clothes. But the substance was to be put on envelopes, and hardly can have been strong enough to do much burning. The defendant’s son said, “ I had just as soon put my hands in it all over, — I have done so ”; and later, in answer to the question, “ It burned your face, or it burned your dress ?” the plaintiff said, “ I didn’t mean that; I meant that it was getting in my hair; it did n’t burn
Exceptions were taken to questions to a witness, Lewis, as to ' how the machine ran the day before, and as to the proper consistency of the substance in order to have the machine work rightly, which were answered, in effect, that when the substance was of the right thickness the machine always spattered. The defendant had put in evidence that the glue would not spatter if properly mixed, and that the plaintiff was to blame if the mixture was wrong. It was open to the plaintiff to contradict this evidence, and it was permissible to show the habit of the machine to spatter down to just before the accident, not only on the question of the defendant’s knowledge of the danger, but also on that of the behavior of the machine at the time of the accident. Shea v. Glendale Elastic Fabrics Co. 162 Mass. 463. Bemis v. Temple, 162 Mass. 342. Reeve v. Dennett, 145 Mass. 23, 28. The evidence of another witness, that the glue had to be prepared to stick on the envelope, was a step in the explanation of what was the proper consistency of the glue.
An expert was called by the defendant, but as it did not appear that he knew the machine otherwise than from hearsay, or, as in Lang v. Terry, 163 Mass. 138, what kind of a machine he assumed it to be, he properly was not allowed to testify as to whether looseness of the gum box would affect the spattering. Then it was attempted to make his testimony competent by asking him whether the principle of all the machines with reference to gumming is practically the same. But, technically, this took his knowledge of the machine for granted, since, unless he could say on some ground that this machine was like others, he could not answer the question. As the very object of it was to prove his knowledge, the result could not be reached in that way.