193 Mass. 237 | Mass. | 1906
The plaintiff was injured while in the defendant’s employment by the splashing up into his face and eyes of a mixture composed of oil of vitriol, nitric acid, and muriatic acid from a large crock standing in the yard of the defendant’s establishment
The defendant contends that the plaintiff was not in the exercise of due care, that he assumed the risk, that he was not acting within the scope of his employment and that the judge erred in excluding certain evidence.
Whether the plaintiff was in the exercise of-due care and assumed the risk depends on what knowledge and experience he had of the dangerous character of the mixture. He testified in substance that he did not'know what the mixture was composed of or contained, and was not instructed by any one as to its dan
The ground on which the defendant contends that the plaintiff was acting outside of the scope of his employment is that he was employed as a scratcher on silver and afterwards set to work on a foot press and that getting acid was not a part of his duty at either of those jobs. But there was testimony tending to show that it became a part of his work to do errands during the last two weeks, that the foreman of the department where he worked told him to do as Hall wanted him to and had directed Hall to
The remaining exception is to the exclusion of the answer to the 36 th and 39th interrogatories in the deposition of Hall who sent the plaintiff down to get the acid. The interrogatories were as follows: “ Int. 36. What was the location and condition of the jars referred to in the last interrogatory, namely, when you first saw them after William H. Hodde was injured?” “Int. 39. Was there any acid after the accident in the pitcher said Hodde carried down with him before the accident?” The answer to the first interrogatory was “ The jar had been moved about two or three inches,” and to the second “ There was not.” The defendant’s theory as to the way in which the accident happened was that “ the plaintiff bent over and tipped the large jar a little, and then slipped and dropped the jar, whereupon the acid splashed up into his face ” and its contention is that the evidence that was excluded tended to support this theory. It may well be doubted whether if the evidence had been admitted it would have affected the result, and therefore whether the defendant was harmed by its exclusion. But the evidence was unaccompanied by any offer to show that the condition of things had not changed between the happening of the accident and the time to which the observation of the witness related. And though the interval was short,
We have considered only the exceptions which have been argued treating the others as waived.
The result is that the exceptions must be overruled.
So ordered.
The defendant was a corporation engaged in the manufacture of jewelry.
Hall testified that he should say it was about ten or fifteen minutes after • the plaintiff was injured when he saw the jars containing acid and those used in transporting it.