116 Minn. 509 | Minn. | 1912
This action is brought by plaintiff, for the benefit of the next of kin of Albert J. Wendt, deceased, to recover damages for the death of Wendt through the alleged negligence of the defendant corporation, in whose employ Wendt then was. The other defendant is claimed to have been a foreman of the employer, and is also charged with negligence. At the close of all the evidence a verdict wras directed in favor of the defendants. A motion for a new trial was made and denied. This appeal is from the order denying the motion.
The deceased was a millwright and carpenter forty-seven years old, five feet six inches tall, and weighing about two hundred pounds.
On January 21, 1911, he, with one Brettschneider, also a millwright, had completed putting in some shaftings and countershaft and pulley in a room called the “casing room” of the hog slaughtering department of the defendant corporation at South St. Paul. These shafts and pulleys were hung from the rafters of the room, and in order to do the work a scaffold had been erected by some other employees. This scaffold was some five or six feet high, and came to within two or three feet of the shafting, belts, and pulley above it. After the machinery was put in motion it was noticed that a belt shifter, when placed in a certain position, projected so as to interfere with a belt. The defendant Fisher, the assistant superintendent or foreman of the defendant corporation, directed the millwrights to cut this off a couple of inches. The machinery and belts were in motion. The end to be cut off was located between two
The only eyewitness to the accident was Brettschneider, and he testified positively that the rung was in, and broke when Wendt stepped down upon it, thus throwing him on the belt. Were there no other evidence in the case than the testimony of defendant’s witnesses that the rung was not in the ladder on the day in question, it is clear that the jury, and not the court, should have passed on that fact. But in this case the broken rung and the ladder were in evidence when the court directed the verdict. Both the broken pieces of the rung and the ladder were produced in this court, and plaintiff conceded the ladder to- be the ladder used by Wendt, and the pieces of the rung to be the identical piece of wood which he claims broke and caused the accident.
The rung is soft, brittle wood, one inch thick and about two to two and one-half inches wide. ■ The sides or uprights of the ladder are two pieces of plank, two inches thick by four inches wide. On one edge of these uprights the rungs, at a distance apart of some
Order affirmed.