177 Mass. 69 | Mass. | 1900
The plaintiff was injured by stepping into a
depression about twelve inches deep, a few feet long, and four or five feet wide, in the floor of the defendant’s mill. This depression was where the elevator passed up and down through the building, and was made by an opening in the floor, with a slide
It is difficult to find in the case any evidence tending to show that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care. She testified that her sight was not very good, but she said nothing of any particular defect. There was a gas light as usual, about two feet from the elevator, and she said it seemed that night as if the light was very dim. This she sought to explain by the fact that in coming from her room through the covered passageway connecting the two buildings she passed through an atmosphere colder than that in the rooms, and suggested the possibility of steam condensing on her glasses.
Without determining whether there was any evidence that she was in the exercise of due care, we must sustain the exceptions on the ground that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant. The depression in the floor was a part of the permanent construction of the building, that was plainly visible when the plaintiff entered the defendant’s service. She agreed to work where it was necessary to pass through a building so constructed in going to and from the place of her service, and she impliedly agreed to assume all the risks resulting from this mode of construction. The defendant owed her no duty to change its building in this particular. Gleason v. Smith, 172 Mass. 50. Murch v. Thomas Wilson’s Sons, 168 Mass. 408, and cases there cited. There is nothing else in the management of the building that shows negligence of the defendant which caused the accident. The warp beams, so far as appears, were properly left in rows upon the floor. That was the usual and ordinary method of doing the business when the plaintiff made her contract, and there is nothing to indicate that there was any difficulty in walking out safely by the elevator while they were there. The gas light was burning where it had always been, about two feet from the depression, and, so far as appears, there was nothing there which exposed the plaintiff to danger except those conditions in the management of the business, in reference to which she impliedly contracted when she entered the defend
The construction of the floor does not appear to have been in violation of the Pub. Sts. c. 104, § 14.
Exceptions sustained.