24 Wash. 556 | Wash. | 1901
This action was commenced in the superior court of Walla Walla county, and was brought by the respondent against appellants to recover damages for personal injuries received by respondent while working with a threshing machine owned and operated by appellants. The complaint shows that appellants were husband and wife, and engaged in the business of farming, and of threshing their grain raised on their own land, and also the grain of other persons; that the respondent was a blacksmith by trade, and a blacksmith and a separator tender by occupation, well skilled in both of said occupations, and capable of earning at said occupations the sum of $3.50 per day during every working day of the year; that on the 3d day of August, 1-898, he was forty-five years old, healthy, robust, industrious, and active for his years, and but for the injury complained of would have continued capable of earning, and would have earned, said sum per day continuously for many years to come; that on the 3d day of August, 1898, he was employed by appellants as a separator tender in their business of threshing their grain upon a certain farm in said county commonly known as the “Kimball Kanch;” that the separator by
“At the time the said plaintiff undertook the employment of separator tender for said defendants, he at all times well knew and was informed that it was necessary in order to, with safety to himself, repair or clean the cylinder teeth or concave teeth described in the complaint, that he should insert in the cylinder of said machine a certain iron rod furnished to him for said purpose, or adopt other means so that said cylinder might be held fast and would not move while the said teeth were being repaired or cleaned; but the said plaintiff, disregarding said knowledge and said information, on the said 3d day of August, 1898, undertook to repair and clean the cylinder teeth and concave teeth of said machine when the same had become clogged and stopped, while the engine furnishing the motive power to said separator was in motion, and without causing the said engine to stop, and without inserting in said cylinder in which the said concaves were the said iron bar so furnished him to be inserted for said purpose, and without disconnecting said separator from said engine and without adopting any method whereby said cylinder should be held stationary while said cleaning and repairing was being done; so that, by reason of such carelessness, negligence and fault of the said plaintiff, and without any carelessness, negligence or fault of said defendants, or either of them, said cylinder suddenly started to turn and caused thereby the injury complained of.”
The case was tried before a jury, and a verdict returned against appellants in the sum of $5,182.50. Appellants
Appellants’ first assignment of error is as follows: “Error of the court in refusing- to instruct the jury to find for the defendants;” which refusal was excepted to. Counsel insist that respondent, Iiencke, was guilty of contributory negligence in not removing the tumbling rod before placing his hands in the cylinder. It appears from the evidence that the engine communicated ’its power to the separator by means of a revolving tumbling rod, which consisted of sections united by means of knuckles and pins, and two sections could easily he disconnected by removing the pin holding the knuckles together. It is contended that Iiencke should have disconnected this rod before commencing his work at the cylinder, thus making it impossible for any power to be communicated to the cylinder. Witnesses testified that they had never seen this done, hut that they themselves and others whom they had observed had always done this work at the cylinder and concaves without disconnecting the separator from the source of power. Certainly there was sufficient evidence upon this subject to justify the jury in believing that an ordinarily prudent man would not think it necessary to disconnect the engine from the separator in the absence of knowledge on his part that the engine was defective and liable to start automatically. It must have been manifest to the jury from the evidence that a man of ordinary prudence would have a right to expect that when the engine was stopped it would remain stationary until started by the act of the engineer in charge. The testimony shows that the engine was stopped for the express purpose of giving Iiencke an opportunity to adjust the teeth on the cylinder and concaves, and, if the jury believed from the evidence that he had no knowledge of any defect in this engine,
“Question. Are you an engineer ? .
Answer. Ho, sir.
Q. Had you discovered any defect in this engine ?
A. Ho, sir.
Q. You did not know anything about it ?
A. Ho, sir.”
The jury must have believed the above evidence, and it is sufficient to sustain the finding that Hencke knew of no irregularity in this engine, and was acting the part of a prudent man, when he worked at the cylinder without disconnecting the tumbling rod.
It is next contended that Hencke was guilty of contributory negligence in not inserting an iron bar so as to catch the teeth of the cylinder, and thus hold it from turning, and it is asserted by counsel that Willard H. Babcock, one of the appellants, had instructed Hencke to use such a bar when working at the cylinder and concave. There is a conflict in the testimony upon this point. Babcock and one or two other witnesses testified to a conversation which is said to have occurred-when a number of persons were present, including Hencke, in which conversation Babcock referred to an occasion when his own hand was caught by the cylinder, and hé said, in substance, that he would not take chances himself any more, but had since always used the bar, and wanted every one else to do it, as he did not want any one hurt. Hencke denies hearing this conversation. The jury were expressly instructed by the court that if they found from the evidence that Hencke
There is much evidence hearing upon the defective condition of the engine, to the effect that by means of a defective valve there was such leakage of steam as.was liable to start the engine at any moment, and that it was this condition that caused it to start while Hencke’s hands were in the cylinder. The fact is, as shown by the testimony, that it did start suddenly and unexpectedly, and the jury should determine if it was because of the defective condition of the engine. There was evidence to the effect that Babcock knew of such defective condition, and that he had said he would wait until they finished threshing at the Kimball ranch before he would have it repaired.
Appellants’ fifteenth assignment of error is as follows:
“Error of the court in giving a portion of the instructions orally after request for written instructions had been made and against the objection of defendants’ counsel.”
We learn from the record that respondents’ counsel requested the court to instruct the jury in writing, but immediately thereafter withdrew the request. It appears, however, that appellants’ counsel did not hear the announcement of the withdrawal of the request for written instructions. The court thereafter gave a portion of his instructions orally, and upon the return of the jury from the jury room with a request from them for further instructions,he again instructed them to some extent orally. Appellants’ counsel now except to the course of the court in instructing orally after the request of respondent’s counsel for written instructions, on the theory that as they did not hear the withdrawal of the request by respondent’s counsel, they had a right to expect that the instructions
Appellants’ sixteenth assignment of error is as follows: “Error of the court in instructing the jury at such length that they were misled and confused.” The instructions were long, it is true, there being sixty numbered instructions. We recognize it to be the duty of the trial court to state the law to the -jury as succinctly and directly as XDOssible, so that they may not become confused. It is impossible, however, for us to lay down any rule, and say that instructions of a given length may have confused the jury. This must rest largely in the discretion of the court trying the cause, as long as the instructions given contain correct statements of the law as applied to the particular case. We realize that there is a tendency with trial courts to give voluminous instructions in what they deem to be important cases, but we do not believe this practice arises so much from the volition of the courts themselves as from the practice of counsel in submitting requests for numerous and extensive instructions. The judge, with a sincere desire to be fair, and fearing that he may commit error if he shall decline to give a requested instruction that contains a statement of the law applicable to any fact in the case, is thus often led, in the haste and pressure of a jury trial, to repeat himself, and to make his instructions longer than he otherwise would. In the case at bar we note from the
The remaining assignments of error upon the court’s instructions we do not deem it necessary to discuss, for the reason that we think the instructions, taken as a whole, fairly state the law applicable to the case.1 Upon the whole, we find no substantial error in the record.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.