69 Vt. 1 | Vt. | 1894
The plaintiff, a boy of fourteen, was one of several helpers employed in the defendant’s spinning-room. He lost an arm while at work under the immediate direction of one Sturgis, who was mending a belt which hung from a revolving shaft. The plaintiff was standing near the top of a step-ladder, holding the belt from the shaft to prevent it from crawling, when he was caught by the belt in some manner and drawn over the shaft. He had been employed in this room about two years. His evidence tended to show that his ordinary duties were to sweep the floor, pick up waste, change bobbins, mend broken threads and occasionally oil and clean some parts of the machinery when it was
The shaft from which this belt was hanging was the main shaft, elevated thirteen feet above the floor, and having-three hundred revolutions a minute. Attached to this shaft was a drum four feet in diameter, which was connected by a twelve-inch belt with the gearing of the water power beneath. There was a space of five or six feet between the drum and the wall of the building. The step ladder was set up in this space, by the side of the drum and main belt, and about a foot from them. It was a step ladder of the ordinary construction, twelve feet high, somewhat worn, and not entirely firm. There was nothing by which the plaintiffcould steady himself but the ladder. The rapid motion of the drum and connecting belt produced aconsiderablemovement of the air where the ladder stood. It was not claimed that the plaintiff came in contact with either the drum or the main belt. The evidence of the plaintiff tended to show that on going up the ladder he became frightened, and returned to the foot of the ladder and told Sturgis he did not want to stay up there for fear he would be hurt, and that Sturgis thereupon clapped his hands together and told him with an oath to go up or take his hat and go home, and that upon this he went up the ladder again and received his injury.
The case was submitted to the jury on the theory that there was evidence tending to show that Sturgis was negligent in requiring of the plaintiff a dangerous service not
It is well settled that one who engages in a dangerous employment as the servant of another takes upon himself all the risks which are ordinarily incident to that employment, and that among the risks thus assumed are those which •arise from the negligence of a fellow-servant. It is also true that one who is engaged with another in the same employment is not divested of the character of a fellow-servant by the mere fact that he has authority to direct the other in his work. A minor, even if a child of tender years, is held to be within the application of these general rules. But in the case of young persons their effect is modified by other rules, which impose special duties upon the employer in view of the inexperience and want of judgment of servants of this class. It is the duty of one who employs an immature and inexperienced person for a dangerous service to explain to him the perils incident to his work, and instruct him how to avoid them. But the giving of proper instructions will not relieve an employer from liability to a child, if the work required of him was not within the scope of his employment and not such as ought to have been required of a person of his capacity.
The plaintiff was not engaged for the performance of any specific work. He was to do such general work in the spinning room as was suited to his capacity. His engagement contemplated the undertaking of more difficult work as he became fitted to do it. It is evident that this is not a case in which it can be said as matter of law that the. service the plaintiff was called upon to render was or was not such as it was his contract duty to perform. This new service
If this service was beyond the plaintiff’s capacity, and so outside the scope of his employment, he did not assume the risks attendant upon it. A person of mature years might have been held to have assumed them by consenting to do the work; but the rights of a child are not permitted to depend upon his ability to discriminate promptly as to the work required of him, or to refuse obedience to the command of his superior. This limitation of the plaintiff’s risk renders the doctrine of fellow-servant inapplicable. In entering the defendant’s service, the plaintiff assumed only such risks arising from the negligence of his co-employees as might be incurred within the scope of his employment. So it is not necessary to determine whether the nature and extent of Sturgis’ authority over the plaintiff were such as to exclude him from the relation of fellow-servant. The effect of his authority over the plaintiff is to be considered without reference to that relation. The defendant assigned Sturgis to the care of the machinery and placed the plaintiff under his orders. If Sturgis, acting within the sphere of his own duty, required of the plaintiff a service which was outside his employment, and which a prudent master would not have imposed upon a person of his years, strength and judgment, the defendant is liable for the consequences of the improper order.
In The Union Pacific Railroad Company v. Fort, 17 Wall. 553, a boj’ of sixteen had been engaged as a helper in a machine shop. After he had been employed for a few months in receiving mouldings as they came from a machine, he was sent by the person under whose direction he was working
It is apparent that the plaintiff’s evidence entitled him to go to the jury upon the question of negligence as depending upon his capacity for the service, irrespective of the giving of instructions, and that this alone would have prevented the direction of a verdict for the defendant.
But assuming that the service required of the plaintiff was such as he might properly have been called upon to undertake with suitable instructions, it remains to consider whether there was evidence tending to show that the defendant was negligent in failing to instruct him.
It is said there was no evidence that the service was hazardous. It was not necessary to have the service so characterized by witnesses. The mere description of the work was evidence tending to show that it was hazardous. It is said that the previous service of the plaintiff had been such that his employer was justified in assumingthathe was fitted to undertake the work required of him. The length of time the plaintiff had been employed there, the nature of the work he had been engaged in, and the knowledge he had acquired of the machinery, were important to be considered by the jury, but afforded no basis for a conclusion of law. In
It is further insisted that however different this service may have been from the work plaintiff had previously done, it must be supposed from his long employment in the room that he knew the shaft was in motion and that contact of the belt with it would be dangerous, so that any instructions that could have been given would have simply covered what he already knew. In Buckley v. Gutta Percha, etc., Mfg. Co., 113 N. Y. 540, a boy who was in the performance of his duty about a machine at which he had worked for several days, slipped on the floor, and involuntarily threw out his hand, in such a manner as to thrust it into a set of cogwheels. Here it was said to be “impossible to perceive how the absence of instructions had anything to do with the injury.” In Ogley v. Miles, 139 N. Y. 458, the plaintiff lost his fingers by a buzz-saw soon after he was set to work at one by the defendants without instructions. It appeared, however, that he had operated such a saw before, lougenough
But we think the case under consideration is not fairly within this line of decisions. The plaintiff was suddenly called upon to perform a service which was essentially different from any he had before undertaken. The danger of the service lay somewhat in the place where it was to be done, and the position it was necessary to take in doing it. It cannot be assumed from the fact that the plaintiff knew in a general way of the movement of the shaft and its effect upon a belt, that he so understood the dangers connected with the performance of this particular service that the caution and instruction of an experienced workman would have been of no benefit to him. We think the plaintiff’s knowledge in the respects stated will not justify us in holding as matter of law that he was not entitled to caution or instruction under the circumstances disclosed by his evidence.
It being for the jury to determine whether instructions should have been given the plaintiff, it is necessary to consider whether any omission of Sturgis in this matter was the negligence of the defendant. It is evident that the right of an employee to receive instructions cannot be made to depend upon the presence of the employer or his general representative. The duty must often rest upon the one whose order creates the necessity for the instruction. In such a case the employer cannot excuse himself for the employee’s failure to receive instruction by saying it was- the neglect of a fellow-servant. If it became the duty of the defendant to instruct the plaintiff, the performance of that duty devolved upon Sturgis, and any negligence of Sturgis therein would be chargeable to the defendant. This holding is not upon the ground that Sturgis was nota fellow-servant of the plaintiff in the general sense, but upon the ground that his connection
So there was evidence tending to show that the defendant was negligent in the matter of instructions.
The defendant’s fourth request, to the effect that the duty of instruction would depend upon the plaintiff’s need of it, and not upon the fact of his minority, was fully complied with.
The defendant requested the court to charge that if this service was within the scope of the plaintiff’s employment, he took the risk of any peril attending it “that was apparent and obvious and comprehensible to him.” We think this request was substantially complied with. The jury received the following instruction: “It is true, as a general rule of law, that employees take the ordinary risks incident to their employment. And this applies to children, if they are able to understand clearly the risks and dangers. If they are not able to understand the risks and dangers, then they should be informed and appraised of them.” The jury had before this been told that “if a child has mind enough, discretion enough, to fully appreciate the danger, then the caution would not be required.” And again: “If a child has mind and discretion sufficient to see and fully appreciate the danger to which he is exposed, then the law requires that he shall use that capacity in order that he may recover.” We are satisfied from a careful examination of the whole charge that the jury must have understood that if this service was within the scope of the plaintiff’s employment, and the danger attending it was obvious and comprehensible to him, he took the risk of it, and was not entitled to recover.
No exception was taken to the charge as given.
Judgment affirmed.