177 Mass. 128 | Mass. | 1900
This is an action for personal injuries suffered by the plaintiff in consequence of his putting his fingers into the quadrant gear of a spinning mule while in the dark. At the trial the judge took the case from the jury, and his ruling is before As on exceptions. The plaintiff was working in front of the mule under incandescent electric lights. They went out, and the room was dark for a minute and a half or two minutes. He stooped .to reach the shipper with his left hand in order to stop the machine, and a finger of his right hand went into the quadrant gear and was crushed before he could pull the shipper. He was an experienced spinner, had been in the defendant’s employment for four months, had worked on the machine in question in the evenings for four or five weeks, and knew its construction and understood it. So far as appears the
But further, if the plaintiff had not taken the risk, and if there is any evidence of negligence on the defendant’s part in using a common form of electric light, we still should think the ruling right.
Two pieces of testimony are relied on as strengthening the plaintiff’s case, although on somewhat inconsistent grounds. One is that he had been told by the foreman to stop his machine-when going in or out when anything happened. The other, that he reached to get hold of the shipper to save himself. It seems to us that neither of these gives the plaintiff any real help. The order manifestly had no reference to such occasions as the momentary darkening of the electric light. The plaintiff did not pretend in his testimony that he acted in consequence of the darkness being prolonged. The import of his words is that when the lamps went out he tried to stop the machine at once. So far as appears he had no reason to anticipate that the darkness would continue for any considerable time, and there is no evidence that there was any necessity, or that he had any reason to think that there was a necessity, for the machine being stopped for its own safety or for the safety of the yarn. So far as appears there was no emergency or need for haste. ' On the ■ other hand, by his testimony that he tried to stop the machine in order to. save himself the plaintiff must have referred to the moment after his finger was caught. He was an experienced workman, and cannot have been ignorant that before that moment he was safe if he stood still or stepped back into the free space behind him, the passage in which he stood being five feet wide. If he thought otherwise the defendant was not bound to anticipate so groundless a fear.
It follows from what we have said that the defendant must