Concededly, farm labor was being performed and the theory of plaintiff’s cause of action was common-law negligence. Appellants urge the following propositions:
1. Venden should be found as a matter of law to have assumed the risk;
2. There was insufficient evidence of negligence on the part of Meisel ;
3. It should be determined as a matter of law that Ven-den’s negligence was equal to or greater than that of Meisel; and,
4. The court erred in instructions to the jury on the questions of Meisel’s duty to warn and assumption of risk.
Venden was a mature adult with considerable work experience. He had no experience at all on the particular saw rig. He had not been a farmer very long and on his own farm he did not have equipment similar to the saw rig involved. This comparative inexperience, known at least in a general way to Meisel, was doubtless given weight by the jury in finding that Venden did not assume any risk, that Meisel had a duty to warn Venden, and that the negligence of Ven-den in not maintaining a lookout and in coming in contact with the shaft constituted 20 per cent of the total causal negligence while the negligence of Meisel was 80 per cent.
*259 The trial court was apparently in some doubt whether assumption of risk was an issue to be submitted to the jury. There was no evidence that Venden was exposed to any danger from the open drive shaft as long as he hauled wood from the pile to the saw. The danger arose when he moved close to the shaft and reached over it. Even though previously Meisel had operated the tractor and power take-off, Meisel had not instructed him not to do so and did not warn him or forbid his doing so when Meisel saw him approaching the tractor for that purpose. Shutting off the power at that moment was a necessary step in accomplishing the work and it appeared both to Venden and Meisel that a moment or two could be saved if Venden did it. Certainly it could not be said that there was assumption of risk as a matter of law. It may not even have been a jury issue. Because of the momentary character of the movement by Venden which brought him into danger and because it had not been part of the task he had been performing for several hours, we. are inclined to conclude that the question for consideration was contributory negligence and not assumption of risk. Whether assumption of risk was a jury issue or not, appellants cannot complain of the jury’s negative answer.
Appellants place reliance upon the dissent in
Welch v. Corrigan
(1949),
The jury’s finding that Meisel was negligent can be sustained. It is conceded that Meisel did not warn Venden in any respect and there is no question but that an employer has a duty to warn an employee of danger incident to the employment.
Welch v. Corrigan, supra; Miller v. Paine Lumber Co.
(1929), 202 Wis.
77, 227
N. W. 933,
It is true that in finding that Venden was negligent as to lookout and coming in contact with the shaft, the jury found that he had a duty to observe the shaft and to keep away from it and it is suggested that in finding he had such a duty, the jury may have contradicted its finding that Meisel had a duty to warn him of the danger. We conclude, however, that these findings are consistent, particularly in view of the jury’s belief expressed in its answers on comparison of negligence that Venden, because of his relative inexperience, should be held to a far lower standard of realization of the danger than should Meisel with his greater experience.
*261
We have carefully considered two previous decisions of this court in which 50 per cent or greater negligence by plaintiff was determined as a matter of law. In
Frei v. Frei
(1953),
In
Sparish v. Zappa
(1956),
The court did not give in full certain instructions requested by appellants. The first of these requests related to the employer’s duty to warn of danger. The request consisted of statements adapted or quoted from opinions of this court which, of course, were asserted with respect to the facts then before the court. Had the request been given in full it would have repeated several times the general proposition that the employer has no duty to warn of dangers which are open and obvious to a person of ordinary comprehension. The instruction actually given by the court followed in large part the request made by appellants and in part stated that Meisel had the duty to warn “only if Walter Meisel could reasonably assume that Kenneth Venden was not fully aware of the danger.” A party does not have a right to repetition of a proposition of law in instructions and even though the various portions of the request may be correct statements, we cannot find that appellants were prejudiced by the court’s giving the instruction in the form which it did.
Appellants requested an instruction with respect to assumption of risk. It may be, as suggested in this opinion, that appellants had no right to have the question submitted at all. Here again a large portion of the requested instruction was given by the court. The appellants now attack the instruction given for the reason that it told the jury that in order to find assumption of risk it must find that Venden entered into a relation or situation that was “known to him to be obviously dangerous,” and that it must affirmatively *263 appear that he “knew or appreciated that the unguarded shaft was dangerous to his safety.” Appellants contend that knowledge on the part of an employee of mature years will be presumed where a danger is open and obvious and that such an instruction should have been given. They had not, however, requested such an instruction, even if correct.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
