189 Mass. 591 | Mass. | 1905
While the declaration contained a count charging negligence in setting the plaintiff at work to help repair a finish
The frames in the defendant’s factory were of different sizes. On the largest machines because of the weight of the chain a tackle was used to lift it out, but the undisputed testimony of the machinist in charge of the work, and under whom the plaintiff was working as an apprentice at the time of the accident, makes it evident that a crowbar was considered a suitable appliance for this purpose on a machine of the size of that which was being repaired.
An employer while under no obligation to provide the most modern machinery and tools for the use of his employees must furnish those that are reasonably safe and adapted to the work, and keep them in proper repair. Fuller v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 175 Mass. 424. Slattery v. Walker & Pratt Manuf. Co. 179 Mass. 307.
In connection with the work being done the crowbar itself was neither a defective nor an obsolete tool, but the danger arose from the manner in which the bar was used when the plaintiff helped to lift the chain from its position.
The mere fact that one of the teeth or needles struck and broke on the plaintiff’s bar is not evidence of a defective appliance, for the needle equally might have broken upon coming into contact with a tackle block and hook if they had been used.
That some other appliance in the opinion of mechanical experts might have been more suitable, or that one appliance was safer than another, was immaterial, as that provided appeai-s to have been fit and proper.
But as the action was at common law, and both crowbars and tackles are shown to have been provided, though the plaintiff testified that no other appliances were immediately available, if the machinist in charge carelessly selected a crowbar for the plaintiff’s use rather than a tackle, such negligence would be the act of a fellow servant for which the defendant would not be responsible.
No duty devolved upon the defendant to inform the plaintiff that if the teeth broke the parts might fly, for being an apprenticed machinist he had assisted in driving teeth into, and repairing bars, and such a danger, even if the needles were made of steel, being obvious, no instructions were required. Meehan v. Holyoke Street Railway, 186 Mass. 511.
Or it may be said that by his contract of employment he took the premises as he found them with the accompanying risk of the frames being constructed in the usual and ordinary way, which might include steel teeth. Wagner v. Boston Elevated Railway, 188 Mass. 437, and cases there cited.
The offer to show by an expert that when both metals are polished mere visual observation will not reveal the difference in density between iron and steel so as to enable the observer to distinguish one metal from the other was rightly excluded,
Hxceptions overruled.
The questions asked by the plaintiff and excluded by the court were as follows:
“Now, Mr. Demarais, to an inexperienced person do you think the difference between polished iron and polished steel is perceptible, apparent? ”
“ Is there any difference in the appearance of the two metals, iron and steel, when they are highly polished, when both are highly polished? ”
“ Is it possible from mere observation to tell the difference between iron and steel if both metals are highly polished? ”