55 Wash. 552 | Wash. | 1909
Action by Nick Vianello against Washington Iron Works Company, a corporation, to recover damages for personal injuries. From a judgment in his favor, the defendant appeals.
Numerous assignments of error are presented, but we will only consider those predicated upon the denial of appellant’s motions for a directed verdict, and for judgment non obstante veredicto. In support of these motions the appellant, in addition to other contentions, insists (1) that no negligence on its part has been shown, and (2) that the respondent was guilty of contributory negligence. The appellant operates a foundry in the city of Seattle, employing a large number of men. In its moulding room is a core oven used for baking and hardening sand moulds. The moulds are made in iron flasks, varying in diameter from two and one-half to five feet. These flasks when ready for the oven are loaded on an iron car. The lower flask is called the drag, the next the cheek, and the one above the cope. They weigh from one thousand to fifteen hundred pounds each. To keep them apart iron dogs are inserted at equal distances on top of and around the circumference of the drag upon which the cheek rests, and in the same manner the cope is separated from the cheek. This is done to permit the circulation of hot air while they are in the oven. The car was propelled by hand, moving on an iron track which extended into the oven. When the car was loaded the employees of the foundry were indiscriminately called upon by the foreman to aid in pushing it into the oven. From twenty to thirty would respond and gather around the car wherever they could obtain hand holds. Around, outside of, and constructed as parts of, the flasks, were ribs and flanges sufficiently wide to be utilized for hand holds.
No competent evidence was produced to show that the car, the track, or any of the appliances were defective, dangerous, or out of repair. The undisputed evidence did show that the
“Point 1. The appellant was guilty of negligence in furnishing respondent an unsafe place to work in, knowing it to be unsafe, when a safe place was easily available.
“Point 2. The appellant was guilty of negligence in taking respondent from his usual work and directing him to work in a more -dangerous place, and by pointing to and commanding him to put his hands in a certain dangerous place, knowing it to be dangerous, without any warning to respondent, appellant knowing that respondent was ignorant of the said dangers and risk, and unable because* of existing conditions to observe and know the same.”
We fail to find evidence in the record sufficient to sustain either of these contentions, to show any negligence on the part of the appellant, or to support the verdict of the jury. While it is true that the respondent testified that he was ordered by the foreman to push the car, that he was unacquainted with the English language, and that he did not appreciate the dangers attendant upon the work, he also . testified that he had been employed in the foundry for more than six months; that he had on three or four previous occasions pushed on the car, and that his ordinary work was only about seventy to one hundred feet away.
The undisputed evidence shows that the car was properly loaded; that the heavy drag, cheek, and cope were always separated by the iron dogs; that they were never clamped; that the car was always pushed by the employees indiscriminately, who were repeatedly warned not to place their hands in the open spaces between the moulds, for the reasons (1) that such openings, were the only places at all dangerous, and (2) that the employees by placing their hands therein
The only possible theory upon which the appellant could be held guilty of negligence would be by reason of its alleged failure to warn or instruct the respondent as to the danger of the work. The undisputed evidence is that the foreman did repeatedly and daily warn the men to keep their hands out of the openings, not only to avoid danger, but also to prevent injury to them, although there is no positive evidence that he gave such warning on this particular occasion. While it is the duty of the master to. warn his employees of dangers with which they are surrounded, especially when they are ignorant thereof and such ignorance is known to the master, it would be difficult to assume that an employee who had been engaged as the respondent had been for the period of six months, did not have ample opportunity for observing all apparent dangers with which he was surrounded, or that he did not observe the same, and that the master should warn
The respondent was guilty of contributory negligence. Although he stated that the foreman took him by the shoulder and directed him to assist in propelling the car, pointing to a place where he should push, he does not testify that the foreman directed him to place his hands between the moulds. Nor is there any evidence that the foreman did so. It must have been apparent to any person of ordinary intelligence that the act of placing his hands between the moulds would be exceedingly dangerous, and we cannot understand how the respondent could have voluntarily done so without being guilty of such contributory negligence as to avoid any recovery by him in this action.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to dismiss the action.
Rudkin, C. J., Mount, and Parker, JJ., concur.