The' plaintiff sued the defendant and recovered a judgment for $2,000, because of personal injuries received while operating one of the circular saws in defendant’s furniture factory.
The jar of the machinery caused the blocks that were cut off to move down the table, and they had a tendency, according to the evidence, to come in contact with the teeth at the back edge of the saw. A block did, in this case, come in contact with the teeth at back edge of saw and was knocked into plaintiff’s eye practically destroying the sight. Plaintiff’s witnesses testified that there is a tendency of blocks on such a saw and table as plaintiff was using, to come in contact with the teeth of the saw and be picked up by the teeth thereof and thrown forward against the sawyer. This was particularly the case in sawing these small pieces. That the suction caused by the saw running through the slot in the table will to some extent lift a small block and assist it to get into the saw teeth.
The particular negligence charged on defendant, and relied on by the plaintiff, was its failure to provide this saw 'with proper guards to protect the workmen while engaged in operating the same, as also the negligence of defendant’s foreman in failing to warn plaintiff of the dangers attending the use of the machine. There was evidence tending to prove the existence of two appliances in general use in the operation of such saws as this one, to wit: A board suspended over the machine and immediately in front of the sawyer, so as to protect him from the flying blocks, sawdust and the like, and the other a wedge-shaped piece of wood so ad
The court also properly refused to give defendant’s
A careful review of the entire record discloses no substantial error, and the judgment will therefore be affirmed.