Standard Oil Co. v. Eiler

110 Ky. 209 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1901

Opinion of the court by

JUDGE HOBSON

Affirming.

Appellee sued appellant to recover damages for personal injuries received, as be alleged, by reason of the *212negligence of appellant. The facts of the case, as shown by the proof for appellee, are substantially as follows: Appellee began work for appellant in July, 1898. He was seventeen years of age, and unskilled in the use of machinery. He was employed to do work as a laborer by appellant in rolling barrels and the like until the evening before he was hurt. That evening he was sent by his foreman to help Johnson shovel corn. The next morning he was sent back to help Johnson again, and carried the corn upstairs, and put it in the hopper of the grinding machine. This machine was run by steam. It consisted of two burrs, the upper one revolving and the lower stationary. By looking in the hopper from the top, whem not filled with grain, the burrs might he seen. At the bottom of the machine, the stuff that was ground came out at a cast-iron spout about five inches long. Appellant had attached to this spout a galvanized iron spout to conduct the material to a hole in the Hoor. The galvanized iron spout was tied to the other by a string. After they started the machine, Johnson went down stairs to fill the bags with the ground material as it came down, leaving appellee in charge of the machine. He instructed appellee that there were a few nails in the oats, which were mixed with the corn, and when a nail came through it would make a noise, and he should turn a crank, and let the nail go through. This was the only instruction given. When Johnson had been down stairs a few minutes, appellee came to him with his fingers crushed. The machine had choked up in the spout, and appellee, to unchoke it, took off the galvanized iron spout, and ran his fingers up in the metal spout to loosen the material in it. The second time he did this he put his fingers too far, and hfe hand was caught by the machine and crushed. The ma*213chine ry could not be seen from the spout, and one could not tell how far it was from the mouth of the spout to the burr. The fact was that the 'burn revolved about two inches above the top of the spout, and there was a¡ lug below this to throw the ground material out. The proof also shows that the machine was subject to. choking in the spout, and that the proper way to unchoke it was to knock on the spout with something heavy, so as to jar and unclog it. Johnson, who had been operating the machine, had a short time before run his finger up in the spout, and it had caught it and knocked off the nail. He says that he was just fooling when he did this, but he gave appellee no instruction as to how to unclog the machine, and did not tell him of the danger in unclogging the spout by putting his finger in it. The court below •submitted the case to the jury under instructions which are not objected to, and seem to have been admirably clear and unobjectionable. The jury found a verdict for appellee. Substantially the only ground urged for reversal is that the court should have instructed the jury peremptorily to. find for appellant. The learned counsel for-, appellant have referred us to a number- of authorities in support of this- conclusion, but they are all cases of patent danger. In this State the rule is that, if there is any evidence, it must be submitted to the jury, and the general rule is in this class of cases that it is only where the proof is clear that a peremptory instruction should be given. Shear & R. Neg., section 218. In view of the fact that the. danger in this case was not patent, ánd that the machine was subject to clogging, we do not see that on the facts the court erred in submitting the question of contributory negligence to the jury.. Appellee being a mere green laborer, put alone in charge of the machine, un*214instructed a.á to ho tv to - unclog it, and ignorant that the .burrs ran so close to the spout, it was a question for the jury whether a boy, situated as he was, in the exercise- of such care as was to be reasonably expected of him, might or might not unloose the string and take off the galvanized iron attachment to relieve the choking, and whether ■or not, on finding the spout clogged up, he should, by the ■exercise of such care, have apprehended the danger of proceeding- to unloose the obstruction in the spout with his finger. He was confronted with a difficulty which had not been explained to him, and what allowance should be- made for his youth and inexperience a jury of twelve men were peculiarly fitted to determine. As has been well said: “Upon the facts proven in such cases, it is a matter of judgment and discretion — of sound inference —-what is the deduction to be drawn from the undisputed ■facts'. Certain facts we may suppose to be clearly estab fished from which one sensible, impartial man would infer that proper care had not been used, and that negligence existed Another man, equally sensible and equally impartial, would infer that proper care had been used, and that there was no negligence. It is this clas-s of cases, and those akin to it, that the law commits' to the decision of a jury. Twelve men of the average of the- community, comprising men of education and men of little education, men of learning', and men whose learning consists only in what they have themselves seen and heard, the merchant, the mechanic, the farmer, the laborer; these sit together, consult, apply their separate experience of the affairs of life to the facts proven, and draw a unanimous conclusion. This average judgment, thus given, it is the great effort of the law to obtain. It is assumed that twelve men know more of the common *215affairs of life than does one man; that they can draw wiser and safer conclusions from admitted facts thus concurring than can a single judge.” Railroad Co. v. Stout, 17 Wall., 657, (21 L. Ed., 745). We think the proof fairly shows that the machine was subject to clogging, and the jury may have inferred that Johnson got his finger injured, not unlike appellee, in seeking to discover or remove the cause of the trouble. Under such circumstanaces, it was incumbent on him, as the managing agent of appellant,-, when leaving a green boy in charge of the machine, to-warn him of the danger, and instruct him how to unclog: it. Judgment affirmed.

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