104 Wis. 406 | Wis. | 1899
This action was commenced J une 1,1895, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff December 22, 1891, while in the employ of the defendant. At the close of the testimony the court granted a nonsuit, and from the judgment entered thereon the plaintiff brings this appeal.
On the trial the plaintiff testified, through an interpreter, to the effect that he was a Hollander, and came to the United States July 4,1889, and when he Yas forty-two years of age; that he commenced working for the defendant a few days thereafter,— drove horses, was chore boy around the barn and boarding house, and piling lumber; that on the day of the accident he was unloading boards from a wagon, and placing them in the defendant’s planing mill; that up to that time he had never worked on a planer, or any other machine, but had unloaded boards from the front of the machine; that, without giving him any instruction or warning, the defendant’s foreman, on the morning of the accident, directed him to go behind the planer and load on some of the boards that had been through the planer; that he did not go at first, but when the foreman insisted upon his doing so he did so; that he took the boards out of the planer, and loaded them onto the wagon;’ that after continuing
Assuming that the foreman was at fault for putting the plaintiff at the particular work mentioned -without instruction or caution, and that he was without experience, still we are clearly of the opinion that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in putting his- hand where he did without looking. This case is ruled by cases in this court too numerous to mention. "We cite only a few of the more-recent. Hazen v. West Superior L. Co. 91 Wis. 208; Schultz
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed. ■