152 Iowa 37 | Iowa | 1911
Prior to June 26, 1909, plaintiff had been working for defendant in its cabinet or mill department for about five weeks. He had been using the machine in question as a planer for about three days before the
On the day in question plaintiff was engaged about the machine rabbeting some posts, and he testified, in substance as follows:
I was standing on a hard brick floor with a smooth surface. As I was standing there doing my work, I slipped and fell upon this machine, on .top of this knife. It caught the post and drew it over the knife, and my hand with it, and there is the result (exhibiting it to the jury). It was done as quick as lightning. It was making five thousand revolutions or so. . . . The back bed is as low as the front. The knives stuck out three-eights of an inch above the table. They were turning in the direction of myself towards the Tack stop.’ Standing in front of the knives they were turning to the right. ... I did not apply the post to the knives before I fell. I did not get that far. I got along all right, and no accident had happened to me until I slipped.^ My slipping was what caused the accident. I made no cut on the post I had until I fell, only just what gouged out when I fell. When I fell, I had not got the post in position. When it caught' it was thrown to the right with much force. My two fingers from the thumb are cut down to the second joint from the end, and this third finger is cut down from the first joint to the end,- and there was some little taken off my little finger. I had not worked with this kind of machinery before I worked there. The foreman set me at work at this machine. When I
There was ample testimony to show that the machine could have been easily and successfully guarded. True, defendant introduced evidence to the contrary; but this made an issue for the jury under proper instructions. There was also testimony to the effect ’ that plaintiff was warned of the dangerous character of the machine before he received his injuries; but this was 'denied by plaintiff. At the close of the testimony defendant asked that the jury he permitted to visit the place of the accident and to examine the machine upon which plaintiff was injured. To this plaintiff consented, provided the conditions were the same then as at the time of the accident. Thereupon defendant’s master mechanic was called, and, in answer to interrogatories propounded, by the court, testified that the
Various rulings on the admission and rejection of testimony are complained of, and many of the instructions are challenged.
Error is also predicated upon the court’s failure to give certain requests. It is also claimed that the trial court unduly limited plaintiff’s counsel in his argument to the jury.
Very many objections are made to rulings on testimony — so many, indeed, that to consider each one would unduly extend this opinion without any material benefit either to the parties or to the profession at large. Some erroneous rulings were made which were afterwards cured. Others, while perhaps erroneous, were* without prejudice, and save as heretofore indicated each party was given the right to introduce all his material and relevant testimony, except perhaps as to some minor matters which were of such a character as that they would not justify a reversal.
II. The case was tried on .the theory that, although defendant was guilty of a violation of the factory act in not properly guarding its machinery, still plaintiff may have assumed the risk incident to the use of unguarded machinery. It was tried before the decision in Poli v. Numa Block Coal Co., 149 Iowa, 104, and other like cases, and what we may say of the propositions of law submitted on this appeal must be considered with reference to the manner and method of trial.
(10) The burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to establish by the greater weight or value of the evidence, which does not necessarily mean the greater number of witnessses, the charges of negligence made by him as set forth in the statement of issues made to you by the court, that he was injured by reason of the negligence of the defendant, as claimed by him in his petition; that the plaintiff him
This was erroneous for the reason that, if plaintiff established either ground of negligence, he was entitled to recover. Kaline v. Stover, 88 Iowa, 247.
III. Bearing upon the question of complaint and promise to repair, the trial court instructed as follows:
The italicised portion of this instruction is complained of, and we are constrained to hold it erroneous. The only answer to the complaint made against it is that the trial court used the words “immediate future” as the equivalent
Instruction 5 read' as follows:
This was erroneous in so far as it applied to unguarded machinery, in that it omitted the question of plaintiff’s' knowledge of the danger. Huggard v. Refining Co., 132 Iowa, 739; Shebeck v. National Cracker Co., 120 Iowa, 419; Wilder v. Cereal Co., 134 Iowa, 462; Cinkovitch v. Thistle Coal Co., 143 Iowa, 595, and cases cited.
The latter clause is not clear. If thereby the trial court intended to hold the plaintiff to the assumption of such risks as he could have foreseen or anticipated, it is wrong, for he was not bound to any such measure of watchfulness. We point out the difficulty in order that the instruction may not be repeated on a retrial.
Y. Plaintiff asked the following instruction:
(5) That, under the evidence in this case, plaintiff was not bound to 'anticipate that .he might slip and fall upon the knives in question, and if you find from the evidence that plaintiff used ordinary care in the use of said machine, and that while so engaged he slipped without fault on his part, and was thrown upon the knives and injured, then and in that event you are instructed that plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence.
VI. Some other questions are discussed; but as they are not likely to arise upon a retrial, which will doubtless be had upon the theory that there was no assumption of risk, we do not consider them.
Por the errors pointed out, the judgment of the trial court must be, and it is, reversed.