198 Mass. 126 | Mass. | 1908
While the plaintiff was at work about a hoisting crane, his hand was caught in certain gearing and injured. The grounds upon which this action is based are that the crane and tools were defective, that there was negligence on the part of the defendant’s superintendent, or the person acting as such in his absence, and negligence on the part of the defendant in failing to instruct the plaintiff properly. At the close of the evidence the judge ordered a verdict for the defendant.
We have read the evidence carefully. It is unnecessary to recite it in detail. The plaintiff was a man of mature age and had been in the defendant’s employ nearly three months at the time of the accident. It was the custom for the men to work at the crane for the purpose of moving heavy pieces of machinery about the yard, and the plaintiff had frequently done so, although he testified that generally he assisted at the end of the boom and not at the foot of the derrick where the gearing was. He admitted however that once or twice he had used the handle at the foot, by the turning of which the hoisting gearing was moved, although he said it was only to raise or lower small pieces. The machine was simple, and the action of the plaintiff at the time of the accident shows that he understood perfectly how to manage it. The wheels and the cogs were in full sight and the defendant had the right to assume that such a man needed no further instructions about the dangers of such a machine. There
Exceptions overruled.