163 Mass. 315 | Mass. | 1895
While at its best estate the circular saw is one of the most dangerous machines in common use, there was in the present case evidence from which the jury might have found that there were bull’s-eyes in this saw, that its arbor had been out of true, that holes and depressions had developed in the saw-table, and that the gouge in use was in poor condition, and
He was almost twenty-one years of age, having been born in Maine, and lived there until fourteen, when he removed to Massachusetts. He lived with his father, who after his removal to this State was in charge as superintendent of the town farm of Wrentham. He attended school in Maine and Massachusetts until sixteen years of age. Up to the time when he was eighteen his only work had been farming and driving team, but the winter he was eighteen he worked six weeks in a wooden-box factory, some of the time working with a matcher and double cutoff circular saw, and the next winter he worked four months in the same factory. How he was employed during the winter of 1892 does not appear. On August 2, 1892, when twenty years and ten and a half months old, he went to the defendant’s factory and applied to the superintendent for work. He was asked if he had ever run a circular saw, and answered that he had a very little, but was npt an experienced hand. It was arranged that he should begin work the next day but one. He was then put to work planing with a planing machine, being first asked if he had ever done any planing, and answering that he had not, but that he had taken away the planed stuff as it came from the machine. The man who asked the question then set the gouge of the plane, ran through one or two pieces, got a boy to take away the stuff as it was planed, and left the plaintiff to work there all day. He seems to have asked no instructions as to planing, and to have needed none. In the factory, which was about one hundred and fifty feet long by fifty feet wide, were planers, saws, turning lathes, and boring machines. The next
While the plaintiff was using the saw, before the time when his hand was hurt, he had ample opportunity to learn the dangers to which that particular saw exposed him in its use. The gouge loosened and got out of place and caused the wood to bind; the saw heated, burned the wood, and stopped. Pieces of lumber which he was sawing had been made by the saw to fly up and fly back, and to fly back with great force. The work he was doing was the cutting of pieces of plank, some eighteen inches in length and some six inches wide, into thin slats or cleats. In doing this he stood at the side of the table toward which the saw revolved, and fed the pieces of the saw. Opposite him stood another workman, who took away the thin slat or cleat, and returned to him the rest of the piece to be again passed through the saw.
The saw-bench was equipped with a feed roll, which pushed the wood along until its rear end was within about four inches of the saw. Then the feed roll was no longer in contact with it, and the method of propelling the wood through was to follow it with another of the pieces to be sown. The plaintiff had sawed all the pieces but one, and so had no other like piece with which to follow the one on which he was at work after it
This was an extremely dangerous thing to do. The plaintiff not only knew the dangers ordinarily incident to the use of a circular saw, but he knew that this particular saw would bind and heat, and that its gouge would work loose, and that it would make the wood it was sawing fly up and fly back with force. For him with this knowledge to risk his hand by placing it on the outer edge of the rear end of the stick, and attempting with his hand to hold the stick and to push it forward through the saw, was that disregard without adequate reason of great and obvious danger which the law holds to be negligence. The accident occurred so quickly that he cannot tell just how the stick was thrown. But even if it was thrown somewhat differently from those sticks which he had repeatedly seen fly up and fly back, the danger that a hand pressing against the saw a stick which was liable to be thrown would be carried against the saw if the wood should fly, is so obvious, that the plaintiff must be charged with knowledge of it. Richstain v. Washington Mills, 157 Mass. 538, 541, and cases cited. Downey v. Sawyer, 157 Mass. 418. Goldthwait v. Haverhill & Groveland Street Railway, 160 Mass. 554. Connolly v. Eldredge, 160 Mass. 566. Watts v. Boston Tow-Boat Co. 161 Mass. 378.
Judgment on the verdict.