81 Mo. App. 124 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
It would require much time and space to describe in detail the machine and the manner of its use. It will be sufficient to say that the press was one of the Hoe pattern, was about twelve feet long, six or seven feet wide, about eight feet high, and was supported by a frame of heavy metal'work, wherein was set. and operated certain cylinders and rollers. The roll of paper on which the Star was printed was located ■at the north end of the press. From this point the paper in a continuous sheet passed through the press from north to south where it came out in the'shape of printed and folded papers. In going through the machine this continuous sheet passed through one group of six feet cylinders or rollers, running horizontally, and thence upward and southward, at an angle of about forty-five degrees and to a distance of two n-three feet to three rollers at the top of the press. These rollers were four inches in diameter, six feet long, operated horizontally as the others, and two of them at least revolved in opposite directions and only about five-eighths of an inch apart. Through this space the extended and continuous sheet of paper passed on its way to the south end. In order to carry the paper through the press the machine, as originally constructed, was provided with tapes working in grooves cut in the rollers. There were'two sets, one working above and the other below the paper. These tapes however, it was claimed, smutted the paper, and they were taken off and fish-line cords were used instead. These in turn were discontinued some six weeks before the accident for the alleged reason that they wore out and broke easily.
During the operation of the press, the paper, thus running through the machine and between the rollers, would occasionally break or become crumpled and so clog the press
Plaintiff based his complaint on the alleged negligence of defendant in leaving off the tapes intended and formerly used to carry the paper through the rollers, charging that by reason thereof the machine was unsafe. In addition to a general denial, the defense was contributory negligence, or that the nature and condition of the machine was well-known to the plaintiff, and the danger of using the same was so obvious that plaintiff by continuing in defendant’s employ assumed the risk attending its operation.
The testimony covers more than two hundred pages of the minted abstract. Of this it is sufficient to say, that on the part of the plaintiff it tended to prove that the tapes which the manufacturer put into the machine served to support and carry the paper through the rollers, thereby protecting the plaintiff and those working about the press; that during its operation with the tapes on, there was less breaking and crumpling of paper and besides it facilitated the adjustment of the paper through the rollers, added to the safety of the operators, and that if these tapes had been in place plaintiff would not likely have been injured. On the other hand the
I. Prominently among the points raised, is the contention by defendant’s counsel that a demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. The basis of this contention is that plaintiff well knew the condition of the press, knew that the supporting tapes had been taken off six weeks before the accident and that by continuing in the defendant’s employ, he, the plaintiff, assumed the risk incident to the employment.
As said by us in a late case, Stephens v. Walpole, 76 Mo. App. 213, the rule is not so general that mere knowledge of a defect will, as matter of law, bar a recovery by the party injured. It is always a circumstance or item of evidence tending to prove negligence, but not conclusive, unless clearly the danger was so patent and threatening that a prudent man would not have taken the chances. We here cite a few of the leading eases. Huhn v. Railway, 92 Mo. 440; O’Mellia v. Railway, 115 Mo. 205, 218, and cases there cited; Holloran v. Foundry Co., 133 Mo. 470, 476.
Plaintiff’s first and principal instruction, and which the court gave with some modification, reads substantially as follows:
“If the jury believe and find from the evidence in this case that on the 30th day of August, 1895, the plaintiff was in the service of the defendant as an oiler and helper on press number three, in defendant’s press room; and that plaintiff did, within the scope of his duty, and in performance of such duty, on the 30th day of August, 1895, go upon the frame work of press number three to remove a clog of the paper which had crumpled up in front of the three rollers at the top of said press, and to guide the paper through said rollers, and that while so engaged in leading or pushing the paper into said rollers his left hand was caught and drawn into and between two of said rollers, thereby tearing -the flesh, etc., * * * and that such injury, was caused by the negligence and carelessness of defendant in not keeping the guiding tapes on said press, and that the keeping of said tapes on said press would have prevented the injury, then your verdict will be for the plaintiff, unless you shall also find that plaintiff was negligent in respect to his act in getting upon the press to lead the paper through the upper rollers and that such negligence contributed to his injury, or unless you further believe from the evidence that said press was so dangerous as to threaten immediate injury from its use, or that it was not reasonable to suppose that it could be safely used with great skill or care.”
It may be, in this instance, that the jury thought the plaintiff entirely prudent in the manner and place of getting upon the press, but believed him imprudent and careless in the way he undertook to push the crumpled paper between the rollers. But under this instruction they were authorized to conclude that they were to disregard the acts of the plaintiff relating to the latter and confine themselves to the'mere act of the plaintiff in getting upon the machine.
Nor are the defects of the foregoing instruction cured by the latter clause thereof or by others given by the court. The nearest approach to a corrective is found in the general instruction relating to contributory negligence where the court
At most this is a very close case under the law and the facts, and while permitting it to go to the jury it should be o„n instructions from the court without substantial fault. It is not at all improbable that this erroneous instruction did much to secure the verdict rendered.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.