1. The plaintiff’s hand was crushed when a bag-bundling press he was adjusting was activated by a fellow employee. Although the defendant manufacturer claims there was insufficient evidence to show negligence on its part and also that there was a failure to show that its negligence, if any, was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries, we consider both these arguments to be without merit.
Since there was evidence that a simple guard could have reduced the risk “without undue cost or interference with the performance of the machinery,” the jury were warranted in finding the defendant negligent in designing the machine. Uloth v. City Tank Corp.,
The jury were also warranted in finding that, in the environment in which the product was used, the activation of the press by a fellow employee was a foreseeable risk and, hence, not an intervening cause of the plaintiff’s injuries.
2. The action was brought in two counts — negligence and breach of warranty. In response to special questions, the jury found the defendant seventy percent negligent and the plaintiff thirty percent negligent. The jury found for the defendant on the breach of warranty count.
The defendant claims that the verdicts on the two counts are inconsistent, citing Hayes v. Ariens Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
In Correia, the court, in discussing the defense of unreasonable use of a product by a plaintiff after discovering its defect, suggests that such conduct “alone is the proximate cause of his injuries, as a matter of law.”
