199 Mass. 591 | Mass. | 1908
This is an action of tort to recover for personal injuries received by the plaintiff while employed as a laborer in the defendant’s works at Worcester. The declaration is in four counts: the first, for failure to give the plaintiff sufficient instructions ; the second, for a defect in the ways, works and machinery which was not discovered because of the negligence of the defendant, or of that of some person entrusted by it with the duty of seeing that the ways, works and machinery were in proper condition; the third, for the negligence of a superintendent ; and the fourth for failure on the part of the defendant to furnish suitable machinery and appliances for the proper prosecution of his work by the plaintiff, and to keep the same in repair. At the close of the evidence the judge on the defendant’s motion ordered a verdict for the defendant, and the case is here on the plaintiff’s exceptions to that ruling. At the argument in this court the fourth count was waived.
The plaintiff applied for work at the office of the defendant, and after some conversation with the master mechanic, who had authority to hire help, was taken by him to the superintendent with directions to the latter to set the plaintiff at work. The superintendent took him to a man who is spoken of in the exceptions as the “ tall Swede,” and told him to set the plaintiff at work, and told the plaintiff to do as the Swede told him to do. The Swede directed him “ to go with a Polander and carry crank shafts from the large furnace to the trip hammer.” The trip hammer was a steam hammer operated by means of a pedal extending in front of and round two sides of the base. When the operator desired to start the machine he pressed down on the pedal. This would let the steam on and set the hammer in motion, and it would continue in motion as long as the pedal was kept pressed down. The crank shafts were placed by the Po-lander under the hammer, and when hammered sufficiently were
It is obvious, we think, from this statement of the facts that the accident was one for which the defendant was in no way liable. The conditions as to the machine and the way along which the plaintiff was told to go were the same at the time of the accident that they were when he entered the defendant’s employment, and the defendant owed him no duty to change them. The plaintiff testified that he had not seen the pedal, and did not know how it worked, or that the machine was operated by a pedal. Considering that he had worked about the machine for half a day, and was twenty-six years old, and, so far as appears, of average intelligence, this seems incredible.
Exceptions overruled.