69 Conn. 454 | Conn. | 1897
The defendant operated in one room in its factory three Fourdrinier machines for drying paper, known as No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3, respectively. Each machine was tended by two workmen, one called a “ machine-tender ” and the other a “ back-tender.” The plaintiff had been in the employ of the defendant as a back-tender on machine No. 3 for about twenty-two months, when, while temporarily tending machine No. 2, his hand was caught in the machinery and injured so that amputation was necessary. The plain tiff brings this action to recover of the defendant damages for his injury ; alleging in the first count that the defendant was negligent in supplying him with machinery for his work which was defective and unsafe; and in the second count that the defendant was negligent in not notifying the plaintiff of a change in the arrangement of the machine by which the danger in using it was greatly increased, and that his injury was caused by said change and failure to notify him thereof.
The facts found by the trial court do not support a judgment on the first count.
The defendant claims that the judgment on the second count is erroneous, because : “ First, the trial court required of the defendant a higher standard of duty in the conduct of its business than the law imposes. Second, the court required of the plaintiff a less degree of care than is required by law.”
As to the second claim: The finding states that the plaintiff had been employed in like capacity on similar machines for
The main reliance, however, of the defendant is on its first claim. It appears in the finding that the plaintiff’s employment involved the duty not only of tending machine No. 3, but also, when the back-tender on either of the other machines might be temporarily absent, of supplying his place on that machine, if called upon by its machine-tender ; and that in pursuance of this duty he was working on machine No. 2 when the accident happened. The machines were dangerous to operate, and there was a risk of injury to the skilled workman using due care ; this risk the plaintiff assumed, and his employer was not responsible for an injury resulting from the ordinary operations of the ma
The rule of law applicable to these facts is plain. If the change in machine No. 2 was merely an ordinary adaptation of the machine to the purpose for which it was made, which a skilled operator must be presumed to anticipate; such, for instance, as the slight change necessary to keep the felt bands at proper tension, the risk of injury was one assumed by the plaintiff in accepting his employment. On the other hand, if the change was one unknown in the ordinary use of the machine, made to adapt it temporarily to a special and unusual purpose, calling for a difference in operation and greatly increasing the danger, then it was the duty of the defendant to notify the plaintiff before requiring him to operate the machine in its altered condition. O'Keefe v. National Folding Box Paper Co., 66 Conn. 38, 45. It is evident that the court below applied this rule, and so did not require of the defendant a higher standard of duty in the conduct of its business than the law imposes.
But the court did find as a fact that the change made in the machine was of the latter description, and the defendant urges the insufficiency of the evidential facts found, to support the decision of the court upon the real character of the change made. Apparently the evidence on this point was
It appears that the change was made by the machine-tender of No. 2, in obedience to the defendant’s direction, and that notice was at once given to the back-tender of that machine, although not to the plaintiff, who was back-tender of No. 3; there possibly may be a question whether the defendant discharged its full duty in notifying those in charge of machine No. 2; so that the real negligence was that of a fellow-servant, the machine-tender of No. 2, in calling the plaintiff to his assistance without advising him of the change. If such question can be considered doubtful, it does not appear that evidence necessary to fully present it was produced on the trial, and no claim of the kind was made in the court below, or in this court.
The other claims assigned in the appeal bearing on the question of contributory negligence, are claims of fact disposed of by the finding. In order to give the defendant every opportunity to urge its claims of law, the judge has detailed the evidential facts quite fully; and one or two especially relating to the plaintiff’s ignorance of the change and his care in operating the machine, are apparently inconsistent with other facts found, and this inconsistency was strongly urged by the defendant in argument. The ultimate conclusion to be drawn from incongruous evidential facts is within the province of the trier, and not reviewable; certainly not, unless the conclusion reached is necessarily inconsistent with clear and settled rules of logic.
There is no error in the judgment of the Superior Court.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.