54 Ill. App. 545 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1894
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellee, a boy who had been at work for the appellants about six months, had a portion of the fingers of his right hand cut off in some cog wheels, while he yet lacked nearly five months of being eleven years old. There is testimony, contradicted, that when he applied for employment he said his age was thirteen years. In doing his work the evidence seems to be pretty clear that he sat on a box, with bis back toward, and about one foot from, the cog wheels; but whether he ought to have been in that position, or stood upon the other side of the machine, is the subject of conflicting testimony. In the position, he did occupy he worked with his left hand, reaching upward to some light cans being carried forward by the machine, his business being to keep the cans in order, and pick out defective ones.
There were two of these cog wheels, one over the other, about three inches in diameter, the cogs probably seven-eighths of an inch long, and the wheels turned in upon each other on the side toward the boy. The evidence states the distance that they projected from the side of the machine at from five to eight inches. On the same shaft with the lower one, was a sprocket wheel, somewhat larger than the cog wheel, and about two inches further out, on which a chain belt, extending upward and backward from the boy, ran. This sprocket wheel and chain were the only protection in the nature, or serving the purpose, of boxing, about the cog wheels.
The boy is the only witness as to the manner in which his fingers got between the cogs, and he says that reaching up with his left hand for a can, with his right hand on the box, lie' jerked the can out, the box slipped, and his right hand went back into the cogs.
■ Testimony was put in, without objection, that after the accident, the cog wheels on that machine and on all machinery were boxed up. It is not improbable that a skilled and experienced mechanical engineerwould have seen that it was prudent to so box them before any accident.
In principle, the case is not distinguishable from Chicago Anderson Co. v. Reinneiger, 41 Ill. App. 324, S. C., 140 Ill. 334, and Ames & Frost v. Strachurski, 145 Ill. 192; and it is not difficult to account for verdicts in favor of the injured, in all that class of cases. Goss & Phillips v. Suelaw, 35 Ill. App. 103.
The instructions given for the appellee, to which appellants object, are as follows:
“ Ho. 1. The jury are instructed that in determining the relative degrees of care, or want of care, manifested by the parties at the time of the injury, the age and discretion of the party injured are proper subjects of inquiry for the" jury. The law does not require that a child shall exercise the same degree of care and caution as a person of mature years, but only such care and caution as a person of his age and discretion would naturally and ordinarily use.
Ho. 2. The jury are instructed that the rule as to contributive negligence of a child, is that it is required to exercise only that degree of care which a person of that age would naturally and ordinarily use, in the same situation and under the same circumstances.
No. 3. The court instructs the jury, as a matter of law, that if a person receives an injury as a combined result of an accident and of negligence on the part of another, and the accident would not have occurred but for such negligence, and the danger could not have been foreseen or avoided by the exercise of reasonable care and prudence, on the part of the person injured, taking into consideration all the facts and circumstances of the case, then the person guilty of the negligence will be liable for the injury received.
No. 4. If, from the evidence in the case, and under the instructions of the court, the jury shall find the issues for the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff has sustained damages, as charged in the declaration, then to enable the jury to estimate the amount of such damages, it is not necessary that any witness should have expressed an opinion as to the amount of such damages, but the jury may themselves make such estimate from the facts and circumstances in proof, and by considering them in connection with their own knowledge, observation and experience in the business affairs of life.”
It is said that these instructions assume the facts, and if' we were to follow the words of the opinion in Chambers v. People, 105 Ill. 409, that “ the fact that the court assumes to state law applicable to particular states of case, is, of itself, an assumption that those states exist,” Ave should be compelled to so hold. That such instructions do imply that evidence tending to prove the “ status of case ” is before the jury is doubtless true, but they imply no more. They are abstract—assuming nothing.
Such a form of instructing is not approved by the decisions in this State, but those decisions held that it is not per se error. Little v. Munson, 54 Ill. App. 437.
Yet in Hill v. Ward, 2 Gilm. 285, it Avas held that the refusal of abstract instructions was erroneous.
The phase “ under the instructions of the court ” in the last is objected to on the authority of Kranz v. Thieben, 15 Ill. App. 482, Avhich is not quite in point. The Avords here mean that if from the evidence, and upon the law as given, the jury find, etc., which is exactly what the jury ought to do.
The appellants asked the court, and the court refused to submit questions for the jury to answer, as follows:
“ Did the defendants omit to do anything that ordinarily prudent and careful persons would have done under the circumstances ?
Did the defendants do anything that ordinarily prudent and careful persons would not have done under the circumstances ? ”
An answer “ no ” to the first question would have been decisive of the case, and the question should have been left to the jury.
But in answer to a question propounded by the court, they have said that the appellants should have placed a guard or cover about the cog wheels, which is equivalent to answering “ yes ” to the first question.
The error, therefore, in not submitting the question, is only theoretical. To the second question “ yes ” or “ no ” would not have been decisive of the case. C. & N. W. Ry. v. Dunleavy, 27 Ill. App. 438, S. C., 129 Ill. 132; C. & N. W. Ry. v. Bouck, 33 Ill. App. 123.
The refusal of that question "was right. On the whole case there is no real error, and the judgment is affirmed.