159 Mo. 333 | Mo. | 1900
This is an action for damages for personal injuries, in which, at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, the court sustained a demurrer to the evidence.
The plaintiff took a nonsuit with leave, and the court refusing to set the same aside, the plaintiff appeals. The only
“On the eleventh day of May, in the morning, I went to this plaining mill where I was employed, and I was carrying lumber to this planer, and then Anton said to me, ‘George you will have to help me to-day, Gus is not here;’ and I answered, ‘It is all the same to me what work I am employed at.’ Well, Anton commenced to plane, and I assisted him, and then the foreman came out of the office, and I walked up to- him, and I said to him, ‘Mr. Wehren, Anton said that I had to help him.’ And he answered, ‘All right, George.’ And I went back to my work. Well, we had been working there for a while; we had planed a load of lumber, and then I noticed that -this hole had become stopped up — clogged. Not three weeks before that, another man had been hurt there, and I took a stick to remove the clog, and I was thinking about myself, ‘If only you don’t — nothing happens to you as it did to Charley Brown,’ and at that moment my arm was caught and gone already.
“Q. What were you doing at the time your arm was caught by the machinery? A. The hole was clogged with*338 shavings and I took a stick and was trying to remove the clog with it (witness illustrates by making a punching motion) and while I was doing that I thought ‘If only you don’t have an accident like Charley did,’ and at that moment my arm was caught and was gone.
“Mr. Werner: After he had poked two or three times with the stick?
“Mi*- Kortjohn (the interpreter): Well, yes, that is right; I believe I overlooked that.
“The Court: Yes, that is the correct interpretation of what the witness said.”
And on cross-examination he testified further as follows :
“Q. Now these two arms, that stuck out from the end of the machine, between the ends of which ran this roller, formed a sort of a guard all around the end of the table, making a little inclosure back of the end of the table the width of the table and the length of these arms, did they not? A. Yes.
“Q. So that in order to get at those knives it would be necessary to either get under those arms and reach for the knives, or to reach in over the arms, that is, when the top of the table was on ? A. Yes; you know I took a stick and commenced poking outside of this guard formed by these arms. I did not go under them, nor did I go between them.
“Q. Then you must have reached over them, is that not true? A. I said before I reached over with the stick.
“Q. That is, you reached over one of those arms ? A. Yes, over the arms.
“Q. That is, you stood outside of the machine and outside of this guard part, and reached over ?• A. Yes, I stood outside.
“Q. Now are these arms just about the same height*339 as the table floor? A. No — Yes, the outside, but at the machine, where they are joined with the machine, they are somewhat lower. The roller can be lowered or heightened by the man who works it; I have often seen him do that.
“Q. In order, then, for you to get your arm caught, standing outside of this machine and inclosure, it was necessary for you to stoop down over this arm and get your arm under the table and under the knives, was it not? A. That I don’t know. If I had an idea that my arm would be caught by the machine I would not have done it. I did not know that the knives came so far forward.
“Q. You knew the knives were under that end of the table, did you not ? A. The knives must be there. I knew that; but that they came so far forward I never knew.”
The machine was in perfect running order; reasonably safe of its character, for the purposes for which it was being used. -The plaintiff was familiar with its construction and ■operation. He was furnished a safe place for the discharge of the duties of his employment in connection with the machine.
In the discharge of those duties with ordinary care it at no time became necessary that his arm should be placed in •dangerous proximity to the edge of the rapidly revolving knives from which he received the injury. Even if the holes into which the shavings fell did become clogged, they could have been easily removed with ordinary care without exposing the plaintiff to any risk of injury. The use of a longer stick even for the purpose of punching the shavings through the hole, would have obviated any possible danger on this occasion.
It is so evident upon the face of plaintiff’s own statement that his misfortune was the result of his own want of ordinary care and of no failure upon the part of his employer to
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.