59 Neb. 257 | Neb. | 1899
Michael Theiler, a minor, brought this action in the district court to recover damages of the Omaha Bottling Company on account of an injury to his right eye resulting from the explosion of a bottle filled with carbonated cider. The plaintiff, when injured, was in the service of the defendant, a corporation engaged in the business of manufacturing • soda water, mineral waters, “patent cider,” and other aerated beverages. He was about twenty years of age at the time of the accident, and had worked for the company in its bottling department during the greater portion of the five preceding years. In 1894 he had charge and supervision of the business for nearly nine months. In 1895,.after being out of defendant’s service for a short time, he was employed as an ordinary hand, and was injured while bottling cider charged with carbonic acid gas under a pressure of eighty pounds to the square inch. In the original petition it was alleged as negligence that the defendant had failed to provide a suitable screen for the bottles which were being filled at the time of- the explosion. After the verdict was returned the following amendment was added by leave of qourt: “That at said time plaintiff was inexperienced in the work of bottling said drink, and was uninstructed therein; that he was at said time using the appliances furnished by defendant in obedience to the requirements of defendant, and did not know, or have means of knowledge, of any danger in using said-appliances, but believed the same reasonably safe, though as a matter of fact they were not, as defendant well knew.” The action of the court in admitting this amendment by the postern gate was unwarranted and can not be sustained. The case was submitted to the jury on the theory that the failure of the defendant to furnish the plaintiff with a proper screen for the cider bottles might, under the circumstances disclosed, at the trial, constitute actionable negligence. The jury were, in sub
Having shown that the verdict can not properly rest on the facts introduced into the petition after the trial,, we will now inquire whether the material ayerments of
There is another reason why the plaintiff is not entitled to recovery. The duty to warn him of latent dangers, if any there were, was not an absolute one. The defendant was only required to do what a prudent mas
Beyersed and remanded.