153 Mass. 333 | Mass. | 1891
The only negligence of the defendants alleged in the declaration, and which could have been found by the jury under the instructions of the court, was setting the .plaintiff to work upon a dangerous machine without proper instruction or caution. To show negligence in the defendants, it must appear that the danger was such that the plaintiff would not be presumed to know it, and that the defendants did not give him information of it. If he knew and appreciated the danger, he cannot recover. It is enough to refer to Coombs v. New Bedford Cordage Co. 102 Mass. 572; Sullivan v. India Manuf. Co. 113 Mass. 396; Rock v. Indian Orchard Mills, 142 Mass. 522 ; Ciriack v. Merchants’ Woolen Co. 146 Mass. 182, and 151 Mass. 152; and Coullard v. Tecumseh Mills, 151 Mass. 85; in each of which cases the plaintiff was younger than the plaintiff in the case at bar.
The machine was a skiving machine for shaving off one surface of bits of sole leather used in making the heels of boots. The leather is carried between two small, slowly revolving horizontal cylinders, and against a knife just back of the cylinders. The work of the plaintiff was to serve the pieces of leather to the cylinders, to be taken by them and drawn through between them and against the knife. The danger to be guarded against was that the fingers serving the pieces of leather to the cylinders would be caught between them and drawn through against the knife. This was an open and apparent, and not a hidden danger. Not only were the cylinders and their movements plain to see, but their operation and effect, in drawing in against the knife whatever came between them, were obvious, and were constantly demonstrated in their use. That the plaintiff was a boy of at least ordinary intelligence is manifest, and is not denied; and if he could fail to see and appreciate the danger, all the information and caution that was needed was given to him by the defendants, and his own evidence shows that he knew and understood the danger. He says that the defendants told him
The ruling that the evidence was insufficient to warrant a verdict for the plaintiff should have been given.
Exceptions sustained.