123 Wis. 338 | Wis. | 1904
Tbe chief contention made by tbe appellant is tbat tbe undisputed testimony shows that tbe plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, and this is tbe only contention which we find it necessary to discuss. Tbe discussion of this question necessarily involves a review of tbe facts upon tbe most favorable theory to the plaintiff which they will reasonably sustain.
The plaintiff was not a boy. He was a man who bad reached tbe age of twenty-six years. He bad attended school from bis seventh to his fourteenth year, and then gone to work as a barber; be bad pursued this trade in various cities in this state, a number of which were lumbering places, most of the time till tbe winter of 1899 and 1900, when he cut cord wood all winter, engaged in barbering again during tbe following summer, and in the following winter again worked
Tbe claim is that on tbis evidence tbe question whether be was guilty of contributory negligence was properly one for tbe jury. We cannot think so. As before stated, be was a man of experience in tbe world, and in possession of all bis faculties. He must have known that a machine doing tbe work wbicb be saw these machines do before bis very eyes was and must be a complicated machine, fitted with numerous powerful cutting instruments, which necessarily were moving with great velocity and power. Tbe danger signal was before
“I knew there were some kind of knives in the machine. . . . I knew they couldn’t make shavings and quarter rounds unless they had some kind of knives.”
But he says he did not know where they were located, and he could see nothing but a black surface where he placed his hand, and that he thought he had stopped the machine. But here again it becomes apparent that these are mere excuses for unpardonable inattention or reckless disregard of consequences. He could not fail to know, if he bestowed the least thought on the question at all, that the machine was still in operation; the belts were necessarily in rapid movement— he. admits the large belt of the machine was still moving; the heads, weighing sixty pounds each, were revolving with great velocity, necessarily imparting a constant whir and vibration to the machine; they were all right before him, except that the small belts were underneath the table. If he was so ignorant as he testifies as to the location of the knives, and if the light was so dim that he could not see, ordinary prudence only called the more loudly for careful examination before placing his hand in the very midst of so powerful a machine.
We have been unable to see any escape from the conclusion that the plaintiff must he held guilty of contributory negligence. Such accidents are always very distressing, and the appeal to the sympathies is strong, but legal rules cannot be varied for such reasons. Adjudicated cases are of little substantial help, because there are never two accidents under exactly the same circumstances. Among the cases in this court having some analogy to the present case may be named Dougherty v. West Superior I. & S. Co. 88 Wis. 343, 60 N. W. 274; Schiefelbein v. Badger Paper Co. 101 Wis. 402, 77 N. W. 742; Groth v. Thomann, 110 Wis. 488, 86 N. W. 118; Koepcke v. Wisconsin B. & I. Co. 116 Wis. 92, 92 N. W. 558. A verdict for the defendant should have been di
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and action remanded with directions to render judgment in favor of defendant.