108 Minn. 69 | Minn. | 1909
The respondent, J. B. Hoover, was injured while in the employ of the Nichols-Chisholm Lumber Company, and in an action for damages recovered a verdict for $1,030. The defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and this motion was denied. .The appeal is from the judgment.
The evidence relating to the defective character of the tongs is far from satisfactory, as it consists entirely of the statement of the respondent of what he observed immediately after the accident, while he was holding the tongs in one hand, and before anything had been done to relieve the pain which must have resulted from the blow in the eye. It is difficult to attach great importance to the result of observations made with the aid of but one eye, while the substance of the other eye is running out as the result of a blow from a red-hot iron. The tongs were not produced at the trial, and no one examined them before the accident. But, assuming that there was sufficient evidence on this issue to go to 'the jury, there was an entire failure to prove that the defective tongs were the proximate cause of the injury. It is conceded that the anvil and
We cannot close our eyes to physical facts of this character. A much more reasonable inference is that the respondent placed the end of the iron over the edge of the anvil, and struck it between the anvil and the tongs, thus causing it to fly backward and upward toward his face, instead of falling forward, or to one side, as it naturally would have fallen, had it been on the anvil and properly struck. This, of course, is conjecture. It is not a case of conflicting evidence. Even if the tongs were defective, the plaintiff failed to show that such defect was the proximate cause of the injury which he suffered, Koslowski v. Thayer, 66 Minn. 150, 68 N. W. 973.
The judgment is therefore reversed, with directions to enter judgment for the defendant.
Reversed.