98 Minn. 502 | Minn. | 1906
Appellant was engaged in the manufacture of pressed brick, and had three powerful automatically-operated machines, each of which consisted, in part, of a circular top, or table, about thirty six inches in diameter, which revolved from right to left around the center, and in this top, which was three feet above the platform on which the attendants stood, were four moulds, or dies, at equal distances apart, for forming the brick. The moulds were about six inches from the outer edge of the table, were the same length and breadth as the bricks, but some three inches deep.
On the machine in question was a quarter cogwheel, which, when in motion, caused the table to revolve by giving it a quarter turn at distinct intervals, and the table made four complete revolutions per minute, and was at rest four times during each revolution, each rest
In operating the machine, two boys stood opposite the die delivering the bricks and picked them off alternately, placing them upon a small car behind them and within two or three feet of the machine, while a third boy, standing a little to their left, as soon as each brick was taken off, brushed the die clean of sand and particles, and also shoveled into the hopper the sand accumulated on the floor from the brushings. The die ordinarily dropped about three inches, leaving the mould empty at the first stop of the table after the brick had been removed, but, if it remained up at that time by reason of grains of sand, it was apt to go down immediately when the table started again. To the right of the boys who picked off brick, and within easy reach, was the belt shifter by which the machine could be easily and quickly stopped.
Respondent’s son, John Hagerty, began work for appellant on Monday, April 34, 1905, when he was a little under seventeen years of age. He commenced as a brasher, and worked at that for a couple of days,
As above stated, after working about two days at brushing, respondent was set to work picking off brick. The foreman was a young man about twenty one years old, with limited experience as a foreman, and he stated that when he put John to work he showed him how to brush the dies and keep them clean, and told him to be careful not to get his fingers in the hole, and that if a-brick got into it to let it go and not'touch it, but simply push in the slide, but not to put his hand in the'hole to take any bricks out because, if he got his hand in there, he would lose it; that he also showed him how to take off brick when he assigned him to that duty, and worked for a short time before him, taking off the brick and piling them on the car, showing him just how to do it, as he did all beginners. John testified that when he applied to the foreman for work he was asked how old he was, and, upon answer that he was sixteen, the foreman said, “All right * * * tell Jim [another employee] to have you brush on one of the machines”; that' the boy Jim Reikel showed him how to brush off the dies and how to shovel the sand from underneath into the hopper, and he went to work; that when he was told to take off brick the foreman showed him how to do it, so as not to break the edges or corners, but did not ex
John was a boy of ordinary intelligence, and so far as the record shows had never been employed in any kind of a factory, nor had ever had anything to do with machinery. Previous to his employment with appellant he had worked three weeks in a brewery pasting labels on bottles, six months at the Northern Pacific general offices as office boy, then for a short time he worked as messenger boy for the North American Telegraph Company, and for about three months worked at Mannheimer’s, assisting one of the drivers in delivering packages.
The foreman’s account of the manner of instructing this boy and others is rather general, and not very satisfactory. It amounts to this: When putting respondent to work at brushing, he was told to keep the die clean, not to let bricks go by, and when necessary to push in the slide. The instructions were general and had reference simply to the duties of respondent, what he was expected to do in the performance of his work, and had no special reference to the difficulties or dangers attending the same. The foreman says he told the boys to try and not let the brick go by, but not to take them from the table when they had gone by, and claims that he warned them of the danger of the machinery. Yet he was unable to state in any particular way how he explained the danger, nor does he claim to have indicated to John the danger of having his hand ■ caught and drawn under the hopper by the quick movement of the machine in case he might be handling brick at or near that point when the table started. Although the foreman claims to have instructed John as to the use of the slide, this was denied, and it was the practice, presumably with the knowledge of appellant, for the brasher and the other boys to indiscriminately knock off spoiled brick,
It no doubt required considerable experience to quickly lift off a fresh pressed brick in such manner as not to break the edges or corners, and while one brick would be of no great value it was perfectly natural for the operator, after the brick had reached the next stop, the die not having dropped, to try and take it off rather than knock it off or push in the slide, conceding he was instructed to do so on such occasions. Here was a situation in itself very dangerous. The circular table moved so close to the hopper, and the point of contact was only four inches from the contiguous die when the table was at rest. Unless the operator had learned by observation and experience that it was dangerous on account of the quick movement of the table in starting, it would be rather natural to reach over and try to save the brick by lifting it off at that point, and, in the absence of express directions as to the danger of doing so, it cannot be said as a matter of law that he was guilty of contributory negligence in so doing.
The case differs somewhat from the case of Truntle v. North Star Woolen-Mill Co., 57 Minn. 52, 58 N. W. 832, and the general principles discussed there have no application here. While true that in the few days’ experience John must have observed how the machine started and stopped, and must have seen that the table came in close contact with the bar and hopper, and must have known that if his hand was permitted to remain in the die while it passed under the cross-bar that it would be seriously injured, yet, under all the circumstances, considering the dangerous and rapid movement of the machine, the age of the boy, the nature of the instructions given him, his means of observation and his limited experience, whether he appreciated the risks and dangers connected with such attempt was a question of fact, to be determined by the jury.
Order affirmed.