112 Minn. 360 | Minn. | 1910
The plaintiff’s intestate, Howard 0. Powers, was killed while in the employ of the defendant railroad company. This action was brought in the district court of the county of Hennepin to recover the damages sustained, by his next of' kin, by his death due to the
We have examined the record with reference to these several questions, and find that the first is the only one meriting serious consideration.
The defendant’s first contention is that there was , no evidence justifying a finding that the death of the deceased was caused by any negligence on its part. The specific negligence charged in the complaint is that the defendant failed to exercise due care in furnishing the deceased a safe place in which to work, in that it left an unguarded shaft and protruding key therein so located that the deceased, while working in the line of his duty, was caught in the shaft and killed. The evidence was sufficient to sustain a finding of the facts following:
The deceased was an unmarried man, twenty-four years- of age, of good habits and industrious. He left him surviving a father and mother, who were in a measure dependent upon him for their support, to which he contributed before and after he was twenty-one years old. He was employed about a month before his death by the defendant as a repairman, with the promise of the position of gas engine repairman when he had learned the business. On March 4, 1909, he was sent to Coates, Minnesota, to repair a gasolene .engine and to make a pump work, which were in the defendant’s pump-house, a detached building fifteen and one-half by fifteen and,one-half feet.
The pumping machinery consisted of an upright’ gasolene engine
The deceased at five o’clock p. m. had so far completed his work that he dismissed his assistant, the station agent; but he remained to complete the work. A short time afterwards the agent happened to pass the pumphouse, looked.ip, and discovered the engine in motion and the deceased’s body wound around the shaft. He was dead.
The coroner came, and in his testimony described the situation as follows: “We entered the pumphouse; * * * walked around where the body was, which was lying over the shaft, naked. I examined it, and, of course, the first impression was to look around and see what I thought was the cause of death. One arm was pulled out here; a limb broken; clothing was all torn off; the body was all grease. * * * I picked up his watch, and borrowed a knife from somebody, and commenced to cut the clothing off that was wrapped around the shaft, and we cut until we got to the end where it was attached to the key — the clothing, overalls, where it was attached to the key.” The oil can was “lying on the floor, tipped
There was conflict in the evidence as to some of the facts we have stated; but the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff must be accepted as correct.
The defendant contends that there was no evidence that the unguarded key caused the death of the deceased, and that the evidence leaves the question as to how he was first caught a mere matter of conjecture. It is true there is no direct evidence on the question, for he was alone when he was hurled to his death. The circumstantial evidence, however, not only affords a reasonable basis for inferring the cause of his death, but unerringly points to such cause; for it was at the unguarded key where his clothing first commenced to wind around the shaft. The evidence was amply sufficient to justify the jury in finding that the deceased, having finished repairing the engine, started it, to test it, to see if it would properly operate the pump; that it was necessary to put oil in the cup, and he stepped upon the base, and reached over the shaft, and was in the act of oiling, when the key, which was then revolving and could not be seen, caught his clothing.
It is further urged that,, if the deceased was caught by the key, the defendant is not liable, because he was injured by the thing he was sent to repair. There is no basis in the evidence for this claim. He was sent to repair the engine and make the pump work; nor is there any suggestion that the shaft and key were repaired, or needed to be repaired. The fact that they were unguarded caused the injury, and not any lack of repair.
Again, it is urged that no duty rested upon the defendant to guard the shaft and key, although it was admittedly practicable to do so, because the engine and pumphouse is not within the factory statute. R. L. 1905, § 1813. The trial court instructed the jury that the building in question was in the same class as a factory, mill, or a workshop, and submitted to them the question whether the shaft with the protruding key was in the pumphouse, so located as to be dangerous to workmen, and therefore' within the provision of the statute that it should be guarded. The instruction was correct, and
It is also contended that it conclusively appears from the evidence that the deceased assumed the risk of working about the unguarded shaft and key, and was guilty of negligence as a matter of law. It is quite apparent, from a consideration of the evidence, which tends to support the facts we have stated, that each of these questions was one of fact, and was properly submitted to the jury.
It follows that the defendant was not entitled to an instructed verdict in its favor. Nor was it entitled to an absolute order granting it a new trial, for we find no reversible error in the rulings of the trial judge, in his rulings on the admission of evidence or on the defendant’s requested instructions. We are of the opinion that the damages, as reduced, are not excessive.
Order affirmed.