The defendant was engaged in manufacturing butter tubs and other creamery supplies, and in doing so operated machines such as a planer, groover, saws, and the like by steam power. The planer consisted of a steel shaft about three inches square, on which were bolted two blades about eighteen inches long and two and one-half inches wide. These were on opposite shoulders of the shaft, and extended over an eighth of an inch. There were bolts on the other shoulders by which to fasten blades when needed. The shaft was hung in an opening about six inches wide in a table or platform, and at either end was a pulley over which a belt run from the shaft below, and ordinarily turned the planer three thousand five hundred revolutions per minute. In front were
2. Sanme:submission Was this planer “properly guarded” within the meaning of the law ? If the proof was such that but an issue of fact was raised, the jury should have been advised of the provisions of the .statute, and instructed what would constitute a proper guard. If it appeared conclusively that the machine was not “properly covered,” it should have been so told, and that in permitting its operation in that condition the defendant was guilty of negligence.
The record is convincing that it was not “properly guarded.” To guard the saw it must have been covered in some way, and Webster’s Dictionary defines “cover:” “To overspread the surface of one thing with another; to envelop; to shelter; to protect; to lay or set over; to extend over.” The Century Dictionary: “To put something over, or on so as to protect or conceal; overlay; overspread; envelop with something.” ■ The Standard Dictionary: “To overspread or overlay with something so as to protect or hide; overlap.” As employed in this statute, the manifest meaning is that something shall be put over the machine so as to protect those coming in proximity of or using it from being injured from the
The errors pointed out were not obviated as contended, and the judgment is reversed.