In this action for personal injuries, sustained while in defendant’s employ, plaintiff, after a trial before a jury and a verdict in his favor, recovered a judgment for three thousand five hundred dollars, from which ■ defendant appeals. The action was brought under subdivision “b” of section 12 of the Workmen’s Compensation, Insurance and Sаfety Act of 1913. (Stats. 1913, p. 283.) Appellant complains, inter alia, of certain instructions given to the jury.
A few days prior to April 14, 1915, plaintiff was employed by defendant as a bran-packer. In operating the bran-packing machine, the bran-packer discharges the various kinds of grain into four holes or hoppers in the floor. The grain passes thence to a mixing-bоx in the floor beneath, from which it is discharged into an auger that grinds the whole mass into a mixture that is conveyed by elevator to a machine called the “bran-packer,” from which it is discharged into sacks. *419 According to plaintiff’s testimony, he was instructed to keep the feed going through the mixer, to keep the mixer running, to keep the machinery going, so that the grain would not clog. On April 14, 1915, while operating the bran-packing machine, plaintiff discovered that the grain was not feeding into the hoppers. Upon going into the basement to discover the cause of the trouble, he found that the screw into which the hoppers fed was clоgged, and that that had caused the belt that operates the screw to come off the pulley. In attempting to replace this belt, plaintiff’s arm was caught in certain gears, and the injury of which he complains was thus inflicted. The gears which caused the injury were not housed, but were entirely exposed. They were about five feet eight inches above the basement floor, and located within a few inches of the pulley that controls the belt which operates the auger in the mixer. The belt, when in operation, was about five feet four inches above the floor. The basement was poorly lighted, in consequence оf which the presence of the gears could not readily be detected.
Without undertaking to state the evidence at length or to discuss it at large, let it suffice to say thаt unless it appears that defendant consciously violated some order of the commission or some particular safety provision of the act itself, it was not guilty of “gross” negligence, simply because it failed to house the gears with which plaintiff brought his arm in contact when attempting to replace the bеlt. The mere failure to keep the gears in a housing, apart from any willful disregard of some order of the commission or of some particular safety provision of the act itself, does not evince such an utter disregard of consequences as to suggest some degree of intent to cause the injury, or to justify thе belief that there was a conscious indifference to consequences.
Measured by thе foregoing standard, it cannot be said that defendant was guilty of “willful” misconduct merely because it failed to house the gears, unless the housing of the gears x/ was made a duty by some general or special order of the *422 Industrial Accident Commission, or by the act itself, and some one of the defendant’s elective officers, with a willful disregard of the life, limb, or bodily safety of defendant’s employees, having actual knowledge of the peril incident to the unhoused gears, or having what in law is equivalent to such actual knowledge, consciously failed to house the gears so as to avert injury.
Thus, then, we are brought to the question, Did the commission, by general or special order, direct the gears to be housed? Or, if it did not, what was defendant’s statutory duty in that regard ?
The act empowers the commission to make “general” safety orders, and “special” safety orders, after a hear-v ing upon notice. (Secs. 57-59, Stats. 1913, pp. 307, 308.) A “general” safety order is defined as аn order of the commission that applies generally throughout the state to all persons, employments, or places of employment; all other safety orders of the commission are declared to be “special” orders. (Subd. 6, see. 51, Stats. 1913, p. 306.) The commission, without a hearing on notice, may summarily investigаte any place of employment which it has reason to believe is not safe, and, after a hearing, upon such notice as it may prescribe, may enter such order as may be necessary. The order, so made and entered, must be served upon the employer. (Sec. 61, Stats. 1913, p. 308.)
In the absence of any such general or special order by the commission with respect to the gears, defendant’s duty must be measured by the general requirements of the act itself.
The act requires every employer to furnish a place of employment which shall be "safe,” and to furnish "such safety devices and safeguards, ... as are reasonably adequatе to render such . . . place of employment safe.” (Sec. 52, Stats. 1913, p. 306.) It also is provided by the act that the terms "safety device” and "safeguard” shall "be given a broad interpretation so as to include any practicable method of mitigating or preventing a specific danger.” (Subd. 9, sec. 51, Stats. 1913, p. 306.) The terms "safe” and "safety,” as applied to any place of employment, are defined to mean "such freedom from danger to the life or safety of employees as the nature of the employment will reasonably permit.” (Subd. 8, sec. 51, Stats. 1913, p. 306.)
After an examination of the entire cause, including the evidence, we cannot say that this misdirection of the jury did not result in a miscarriage of justice. Indeed, it is more than probable that the instructions, considere^ in their entirety, influenced the jury to defendant’s prejudice. In the main, the instructions are too abstract. Considered as a whole, they were calculated to impress upon the minds of the jurors that, irrespective of reasonableness or practicability, it was defеndant’s bounden duty to incase the gears in housing, and that its mere failure to do so constituted gross negligence or willful misconduct.
Judgment reversed.
Sloane, J., and Thomas, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on December 1, 1919, and the following opinion then rendered thereon:
In denying a hearing in this court we are not to he understood as intimating an opinion to the effect that there was sufficient evidence to support a conclusion of gross negligence or willful misconduct on the part of defendant, or on the question whether every failure to comply with a requirеment of the Industrial Accident Commission or the statute is necessarily gross negligence or willful misconduct. On these questions' we reserve expression of opinion.
The application for a hearing in this court after decision by the district court of appeal of the second appellate district, division two, is denied.
All the Justices concurred, except Melvin, J., who was absent.
