111 A. 269 | N.H. | 1920
That the plaintiff assumed the risk of injury from the dangers involved in oiling the going machine, if inferrible from its obvious character, the plaintiff's opportunity to observe and other evidence in the case, is immaterial under the statute. Laws. 1911, c. 163, s. 2. That the plaintiff knew and appreciated the danger of the work from which his assumption of the risk could be inferred does not therefore, as the law now is, bar a recovery. Admitting as they necessarily must that the case here is to be considered upon the basis that they instructed the plaintiff to oil the machine while in operation, the defendants do not claim that the plaintiff's attempt to follow their instructions is conclusive evidence of his negligence. The going machine could, if sufficient care were exercised, be oiled without injury. The argument seems to be that as the plaintiff was injured he did not exercise such care. The danger consisted in the possibility that from misjudgment as to position or momentary forgetfulness or inattention some portion of the operator's person or clothing might come near enough to the revolving gears, in close proximity to which the oiling operation was to be performed, to be *400
caught between them. Whether in a particular case such misjudgment, inattention, or forgetfulness was negligence is plainly a question of fact. Under the statute contributory negligence is not to be established except by a preponderance of evidence. The mere failure of the plaintiff to offer evidence of care or of facts from which care could be found which but for the statute would defeat a recovery is under it immaterial. By the statute the plaintiff prevails on this issue unless there is a balance of evidence against him. He may go to the jury if there is no evidence either way. The conclusion in Gahagan v. Railroad,
The defendants having introduced portions of a deposition given by the plaintiff, he had "the right to read to the jury so much of the deposition as pertained to the same subjects, and tended to qualify, limit, or explain the answers read by the defendants." Whitman v. Morey,
The defendants having read a statement from the deposition from which an admission of want of care might be argued, the plaintiff was properly permitted to read from the same deposition the statement that he tried to be careful.
Exceptions overruled.
PEASLEE, J., was absent: the others concurred. *401