163 Mass. 391 | Mass. | 1895
The plaintiff was not regularly employed upon the hay-cutter, and it seems very probable that on the day of the accident, when Green, the foreman, sent him to take the
The evidence tends to show that the best device possible for the protection of persons working on the machine was attached to it in the form of a hood extending back two feet and a half from the knives. The evidence was uncontradicted that, since January, 1891, when hoods were placed on the forty-three machines used in the forty-three barns owned by the defendant, no accident has happened in the use of the machines except the accident to the plaintiff. The operation of the machine was simple and obvious to every one of ordinary intelligence; the knives were open to view, and the plaintiff well understood that he would be seriously injured if he allowed his fingers to come in contact with them. They revolved rapidly, and when the hay was passing through them, it was drawn forward with a great deal of force. All this could be seen in a minute by every observer. No one who saw the machine in operation could fail to know that if it was clogged, and if the hay was then loosened with the hand and started forward, it would go with great force as soon as it was brought within the traction of the revolving knives. It was apparent to everybody that it would be very dangerous to permit one’s fingers to be caught in a tuft of hay which was about to pass forward between the knives. We see no evidence of any kind of danger which was not open and obvious to every one who saw the machine in operation.
The plaintiff at the time of the accident was twenty years and six months old, and was a “ young man of ordinary intelligence and mental quickness.” He testified that he had seen the machine work not more than three times before the day of the
In this case it may be that no one could tell the exact degree of the force with which the hay would move forward with the traction of the knives, nor just how great the danger was until he ascertained by actual experiment; but anybody could see at once that there was danger in doing the work unless care was used to avoid letting the fingers be drawn forward to the knives. Any one knowing that there was such danger would be expected to proceed with great caution until he became familiar by experience with the forces with which he had to deal. We are of opinion that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant in failing to give the plaintiff instructions, and that therefore the jury should have been directed to return a verdict for the defendant. Exceptions sustained.