253 Mass. 99 | Mass. | 1925
In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover damages for the death, without conscious suffering, of her husband, Dominic Lamberti, on July 28, 1919, while
On the date of his death Lamberti was assisting in unloading a coal car, using for the purpose a conveyor, with an endless belt supported by a metal framework operated by an electric motor mounted on an iron truck. The coal was carried upward from the car, and at the delivery end of the machine were two sheet iron chutes through which it was delivered to a pile in the defendant’s shed. These chutes were metallically connected with the conveyor. The electric current came from the Malden Electric Company, and was furnished to the defendant from the street supply, by means of a cable with terminal attachment designed for plugging into outlets in various parts of the defendant’s plant. The main feed wire came from the Malden Electric Company and carried a current of twenty-three hundred volts, which was transformed, a few hundred feet from the defendant’s coal shed, to a secondary circuit carrying approximately five hundred and fifty volts, and from the point of transformation the current was distributed on the same secondary circuit to the defendant, the Malden Knitting Mills, and others. On the day of the accident, this circuit was actually carrying from five hundred and seventy to five hundred and eighty volts. It was owned and maintained by the electric company, and the testimony was undisputed that the company’s responsibility ended at the service connection in the defend-, ant’s coal yard. The wires and cables carrying the current
The defendant was absent from the Commonwealth at the time of the accident. Testimony was introduced tending to prove that before that time complaints of slight shocks from the machine had been made to the defendant’s foreman; that just before Lamberti died a fellow workman was standing at the discharging end of the coal chute shovelling coal, with one hand on the iron part of the shovel, and received a shock of electricity through the chute when the current was turned on by the foreman, who was at the switch using a stick for the purpose; that at the same time Lamberti cried out, falling forward across the chute; that the current was then shut off, and Lamberti rolled off the chute unconscious and did not thereafter show signs of consciousness. Tests made soon after the accident disclosed a leakage of electricity to the frame of the conveyor which should not have existed, and the same condition was found the day after the accident. The discovery was also made that one wire of the secondary circuit was grounded by contact with a metallic pipe at the Malden Knitting Mills. This was a serious matter, demanding immediate attention, and was repaired the afternoon of July 28, or the next morning.
The plaintiff contended that the defendant was negligent in setting her intestate to work at or near a coal conveyor which had concealed defects dangerous to human life; and she introduced evidence tending to prove that in either one of two ways this condition might have been remedied and
A safety ground wire is one making a direct connection between the framework on which the motor sets and the ground, whereby any leakage of electricity from the motor or wires to the framework is carried into the ground, thus preventing shock to a person coming in contact with the machine. There was no such wire attached to this machine. It appeared in evidence that the practice for many years had been to equip stationary motors with wires of this kind; but there was testimony tending to prove that at the time of the accident no good way of attaching them to portable motors was known, that they were not in general use, and that it was common practice to use a five hundred and fifty volt motor for coal conveyors. Upon conflicting evidence it could have been found that such wires could and should have been attached to the defendant’s motor, and that in no other way could a portable five hundred and fifty volt machine be made safe. Testimony also was introduced from which the jury might have found that a five hundred and fifty volt motor could not be safely installed on a portable machine; that a current of one hundred and ten or two hundred and twenty volts would do the defendant’s work as effectively as one of higher voltage; that this lower voltage could be obtained by the installation of a transformer in the defendant’s plant to reduce the current; and that if such lower voltage had been used the machine would have been safe.
As was said in O’Donnell v. Boston Elevated Railway, 205 Mass. 200, 202, . . electricity is a highly dangerous servant, and the defendant employing . . . [It] for its own purposes is properly held to a correspondingly high degree of care in its use.” The evidence tending to prove that the defendant’s foreman knew before the accident of complaints that employees were getting electric shocks from the coal conveyor would justify the jury in finding that the defendant was negligent in not discovering the dangerous condition and
The plaintiff was not bound to prove a specific defect or a specific act of negligence to entitle her to recover. It is enough if she shows facts from which negligence may be inferred. Erickson v. American Steel & Wire Co. 193 Mass. 119, 123. Melvin v. Pennsylvania Steel Co. 180 Mass. 196, 202.
The rule that an employee assumes the risks of the business and the employer is not bound to change his structure to make it safer for the employee or to use the most improved machinery, applies to all obvious conditions and dangers which should be observed and appreciated. Mutter v. Lawrence Manuf. Co. 195 Mass. 517. McKenna v. Gould Wire Cord Co. 197 Mass. 406. Rivers v. Richards, 213 Mass. 515. But this rule does not protect the employer if he has failed to exercise reasonable care to discover and remedy defects-that are not obvious in the condition of the ways, works and machinery. The facts that the motor was plainly marked five hundred and fifty volts and that a person could see that no wire connected its frame with the ground did not make the risk of receiving a fatal electric current through the coal chute an obvious one.
The defence that the machine was purchased from a reputable manufacturer does not show that the defendant has done his whole duty, when it appears that he has incorporated it into bis structure in accordance with the plan of his engineer and the dangerous condition complained of is in not attaching adequate safety devices or installing a transformer
The jury were instructed, in substance, that a defendant is not bound to provide for bis employees the latest and safest appliances or any particular machine, even if it would be more suitable and less dangerous, in case the one provided is fit and proper. Wolfe v. New Bedford Cordage Co. 189 Mass. 591, 592. If, however, he sets his employees to work on or near a machine with the concealed danger of its becoming charged with a current of electricity which, in the exercise of reasonable care, he ought to have made safe, it is not a defence for him to show that the same kind of machines are commonly used in work similar to his. Hill v. Winsor, 118 Mass. 251. Wilson v. Alexander, 230 Mass. 242. This is true even though the machine itself be perfect in mechanism, if it is found to be unsuitable and unsafe and if the defendant knew this or in the exercise of reasonable care should have known it. Wilson v. Alexander, supra.
In the case at bar it might be found that the duty of using reasonable care, to see that the coal conveyor and motor were so erected, protected, and maintained that they would not carry a fatal electric current to an employee working near them in the ordinary and expected way, was one which rested on the employer himself; and he cannot free himself from responsibility for the discharge of his personal duty, by showing that he complied with the requirements of the Malden inspector of wires or engaged competent engineers to design and competent electricians to install the wires and apparatus properly; nor by proving that he followed their advice and adopted their methods and did the work as recommended by them with the approval of the inspector of wires; nor by proving that he had no knowledge that a safety ground wire would be an additional protection; nor by dele
On the issue whether the defendant has used reasonable care to furnish safe machinery, the plaintiff was within her rights in introducing the evidence relating to a safety ground wire and a transformer to reduce the voltage of the motor. McMahon v. McHale, supra. The jury were instructed in substance that the plaintiff could not recover unless she proved that her husband died from an electric shock resulting from negligence for which the defendant was responsible; and they must have understood that if the current were not turned on the verdict would be for the defendant. For the reasons stated, the requests numbered eleven, eighteen, nineteen, twenty, twenty-two, twenty-four, twenty-five, twenty-eight, thirty-four and thirty-eight, were properly refused; and for the same reasons the exceptions saved to the testimony of the plaintiff’s electrical expert, Puffer, and to the testimony of another witness called by the plaintiff, relating to the installation and function of a safety ground wire and of a stepdown transformer to reduce the voltage of the current, must be overruled. A witness called by the defendant testified in cross-examination, without objection, that in his opinion there should have been a safety ground wire on the defendant’s coal conveyor at the time of the accident and that a hundred and ten volt motor could be used on that conveyor to do the defendant’s work.
The defendant asked the trial judge to rule that the doctrine of res ipso loquitur does not apply to the case at bar, and that the plaintiff cannot recover by virtue thereof unless competent affirmative evidence is submitted to warrant a legitimate inference of negligence on the part of the defendant or of some person in his employ. The defendant contended that the mere fact that Lamberti fell over the coal chute and died is not evidence of death from an electric shock. The judge clearly left the issue of the cause of death to the
The request to the effect that there could be no recovery if the only specific defect was in the circuit of the Malden Electric Company or in the premises of its customers other than the defendant, and that there can be no recovery for any defect beyond the wires, machinery, ways and works of the defendant, could not have been given. Upon the testimony the jury could have found that the employer had the duty of installing a safety ground wire to guard employees against the danger of receiving an electric shock from the accidental escape of electricity, whether due to a defect in the defendant’s premises or outside. The charge made it clear that there could be no recovery unless there was a defect in the condition of the ways, works and machinery of the défendant in his plant for which he was responsible.
The exceptions to the admission of the electric code must be overruled: the evidence was afterwards stricken out and it is to be presumed that the jury disregarded it. Todd v.
All exceptions argued have been considered and no reversible error is discovered.
Exceptions overruled.