60 Fla. 76 | Fla. | 1910
On Rehearing
A petition for rehearing suggests that the court failed to consider testimony that there was no way designed for a walkway which the plaintiff could have used, that the route taken was the quickest and plainest but not the safest, that the plaintiff did not know of the projecting set screw, that the collar on the revolving shaft was designed for a safety screw and not a projecting one, that of the many set screws used in the mill only eight or ten projected, that a projecting screw is more dangerous than one not projecting and that the plaintiff knew of no other way to use.
All the testimony in the transcript was carefully considered. As contributory negligence of the plaintiff • was clearly indicated by.the facts and circumstances in evidence, it was not necessary to state more than the conclusions and the legal effect of the evidence. ■ The plaintiff's age, intelligence, experience and most ordinary observa
The main opinion cites and approves the Lassiter case which followed the cases of Florida Cent. & P. R. Co. v. Mooney, 40 Fla. 17, 24 South. Rep., 148, and 45 Fla. 286, 33 South. Rep. 1010.
The danger of the route taken was obvious, and under the facts and circumstances in evidence the plaintiff reasonably should have known of and appreciated the different ways and the conditions actually existing as he “had worked all over the mill” for several months, and by the exercise of the ordinary care for his own protection that the law requires of him he could readily have anticipated self injury from his action.
A rehearing is denied.