155 Iowa 400 | Iowa | 1912
The defendant is a manufacturer of hardware specialties and employed the plaintiff as a laborer in its factory. While so engaged, plaintiff undertook to clean a certain machine about which he was at work, and in so doing his hand was caught in the gearing and crushed to such an extent that amputation followed. He charges defendant with liability for such injury because of its alleged negligence in failing to instruct or warn him of the dangers attending the cleaning of the machine; in failing to provide a guard for the gearing; and in failing to furnish, as provided by law, a suitable belt shifter or other safe mechanical device for throwing off .and on the belt by which the machine was operated. The defendant denies that it was in any manner negligent and alleges
Whether sufficient protection was so afforded was a fair question for the jury. The opening into which plaintiff put his hand was between four and five inches in width. He inserted his hand flatwise, pressing the waste under his palm upon the side away from the gearing. It is not shown that the machine could be conveniently cleaned at this place in any other manner, and had the gearing been guarded as indicated by the witness, the work could have been so done without danger of injury to the operator. We can not therefore undertake to say as a matter of law that no negligence on the part of the defendant is shown.
Contributory negligence is peculiarly a question of fact for the jury, and where the plaintiff makes a fair prima facie case of reasonable care on his part, the court should not assume to dispose of it peremptorily. And this we think is the situation presented by the record before us.
No error is assigned upon rulings made upon the admission of evidence or upon the instructions to the jury, and we find none in the record requiring us to remand the case for a new trial.