131 Ky. 65 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1908
Opinion of the Court by
Eeversing.
Tine Nelson-Bethel Clothing Company is a manufacturer of pants in Louisville. Edna May Pitts was in its service as the operator of a sewing machine.' There were some 40 or 50 sewing machines in two rows, the ordinary Singer sewing machines, except that, instead of being operated by a pedal, the belt was passed over a wheel setting upon a shaft which ran under all of the sewing machines, and was turned by an electric motor. The belts operating the sewing machines were the usual sewing machine belts consisting of a round leather thong fastened together by a hook or hooks. Miss Pitts had been in the business of operating such machines something over five years, having worked in a number of similar establishments in the city of Louisville, and was regarded as a skilled hand. She had worked at this particular machine for two months, when she was hurt on August 3, 1905. The machine table was 31 inches high. The drive wheel on the shaft was 11 inches in diameter. The wheel directly under the machine was 5 inches in diameter and the distance between the wheel on the shaft and the wheel under the machine, was 14 inches. The shaft was 1% inches in diameter. About two
The ground upon which the recovery was had was that the belt of the machine was not reasonably safe for use; that its defective and unsafe condition was known to the defendant, and unknown to her; and that she was assured that the belt was reasonably safe, and suitable for use, and used it not realizing that its condition was dangerous, relying upon the statements of Begley, the dangerous condition of the belt not being so manifest that a person of ordinary prudence would not have used it. At the other places where she had worked similar to this it was customary for a man' to put on the belts for the girls, but at this place the girls always put on their own belts, and she had put her belt on often before, and had put it on seven times that morning before the time that she was hurt. The belts when new were put together with hooks, and, when they would- break, would be repaired with hooks. Begley furnished the hooks to the girls, and they put them on. When he furnished Miss Pitts that morning three hooks, she borrowed some pincers from a girl
In 4 Thompson on Negligence section 4667, the rule is thus stated: “Such a promise on the part of the master does not, of course, relieve the servant of continuing to exercise reasonable care for his own safety; nor will the promise, when it has no relation to the danger which the servant in fact incurs, be available to lay the foundation of an action against the master. ’ ’ This principle was recognized by this court in Shemwell v. O. & N. R. R. Co., 117 Ky. 556, 78 S. W. 448, 25 Ky. L. R. 1671, where the keeper of a pumping station complained that the roof was defective, and the master promised to- repair it. A few days afterwards the roof took fire, and Shemwell went upon it to put out the fire. The'roof fell and he was injured. The court in refusing a recovery said: “In the instant case appellant, as has been suggested, probably notified his su
Under all the evidence, the court should have instructed the jury peremptorily to find for the defendant.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.