102 Wis. 413 | Wis. | 1899
This action was commenced September 20, 1894, and is for personal injuries received by the plaintiff while helping to operate an edger in the sawmill of the defendants, August 15,1891. Issue being joined and trial had, the court, at the close of the testimony, directed a verdict in favor of the defendants, and from the judgment entered thereon the plaintiff brings this appeal.
There is evidence tending to prove that the plaintiff was hired by the deféndants’ foreman and general superintendent in the spring of 1888; that he was a common, unskilled
There was also evidence that there were six saws in the edger, all on a single shaft, and were adjustable by means of two levers that extended from the front of the edger where the edgermen stood to the saws; that the levers crossed one another about the center of the edger; that the piling up of sawdust under the edger interfered with the operation of the levers, and thereby with the moving of the saws; that when this sawdust got piled up under the edger it had to be removed, and to do that it was the cus
The evidence further tended to prove that on the morning of August 15, 1891, Werner’, one of the two edgermen on the west edger, was taken sick and left, after he had worked about half an hour, and the foreman told the plaintiff to go and help Thompson out, — the edgerman still at work; that the plaintiff went and took the place of Werner on the rotary side of the west edger, and continued to work for about one and one-half hours; that Thompson was taken sick, and in a few moments Peter Nevex’a, another green man, was at woi’k in Thompson’s place; that Nevera had
At the time of the trial the plaintiff was thirty-five years of age, and his coworker, Nevera, was thirty-one. That was ten years after the plaintiff had commenced work for the defendants in and about this mill, and about six and one-half years after the injury. The plaintiff was injured August 15, 1891, and he had worked on the “little trimmer” from October 1, 1890. We must assume that he was a man of ordinary intelligence. He necessarily knew that a circular saw, running like the one in question, would be dangerous to a man touching it with a stick from four to six feet long, or anything, and no amount of instruction could make such danger more apparent. To say that he did not know, or that he needed instruction, is to impeach his intelligence. He necessarily knew, moreover, that to touch such saw with such stick, on the side turning away from him, would naturally tend to draw the stick away from him; whereas, to
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.