Action on the case for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant’s vice-principal, for which the defendant is claimed to be responsible. The plaintiff recovered a verdict, and the case comes up on defendant’s exceptions and motion for a new trial. We will consider the questions arising under tbe motion.
It appears that the defendant resides in New York, but owns a farm in Litchfield, which he visits several times a year. In 1906, there was living on the farm one Wood and his wife. Wood was employed by the defendant to take care of the stock and do whatever was necessary about the buildings, and to work on the farm whenever he could. In the defendant’s absence, he had charge of the farm, but, as the defendant claims, under his specific directions.
In May, 1906, the plaintiff, then sixteen years old, was employed by one Frank Berry, a neighbor, and a relative of the defendant. Frank Berry, by arrangement with the defendant, was accustomed to work at times on the defendant’s farm. Wood and Frank Berry were in the habit of "changing works,” — Wood working for Berry, and at other times Berry working for Wood. But whether the defendant had knowledge of, and consented to, this practice is in dispute. For several days in the early part of May, Frank Berry took the plaintiff with him to work on the defendant’s farm, doing work which he had agreed with the defendant to do. May 11, Wood asked Frank Berry to let him have the plaintiff to work for him that day, and Berry consented. According to this arrangement, the plaintiff went to the defendant’s farm and worked with Wood. Though working for Wood, the plaintiff remained the servant of Berry. Berry merely loaned him to Wood. After doing other things, Wood and the plaintiff undertook to cut up some straw for bedding. For this purpose, they used a feed cutter, the power for which was supplied by a seven horse power gasolene engine. Wood fed the straw into the machine, where it was cut by knives affixed to a shaft revolving at a speed of about 900 revolutions a minute. The plaintiff was directed to remove the chopped straw
The defendant contends, in the first place, that Wood had no authority to hire the plaintiff from Frank Berry, that Wood was an agent with expressly limited powers and duties; that he had no duties to perform which required the assistance of others,^and from which a power to hire could be implied, except in the use of the feed cutter; and that for this service, the defendant had already provided other men. In short, the defendant claims that Wood was merely a farm servant, acting at all times under specific directions. The plaintiff, on the other hand, says that Wood was a vice-principal, that he had authority to "change works” with Berry, or at least that he had authority or was held out by the defendant as having authority, to hire a man to do such work as the plaintiff was employed by him to do.
We will not undertake to analyze, or give a synopsis of, the voluminous evidence on this much contested point. It is enough to say that if the defendant’s contention rested upon this point alone, we should not disturb the verdict. ^
The plaintiff claims that the defendant failed to perform the duties he owed to him, in two respects. First, that the machine as it was being used was unsafe, in that it was being used without an elevator, and secondly, that the defendant did not instruct him with regard to the machine, and did not warn him of the dangers attendant upon its use. As to the first proposition, only a word need be said. The machine was so constructed that an elevator could be used with it to carry away matter after it was cut. Such an elevator would presumably be useful when ensilage was being cut up. But the defendant was under no obligation to use the elevator. He might adopt any other means he saw fit for taking away the cut up matter. How an elevator could have been of service on the occasion in question is not apparent.
If, however, there were any risks incident to the use of the machine as it was, which were not known by the plaintiff, or which were not obvious to nor appreciable by him, especially considering his youth and inexperience, and which would expose him to danger in the course of his employment, it was the defendant’s duty to warn him of them, and give him appropriate instructions so as to secure his safety. Campbell v. Eveleth, 83 Maine, 50; Wormell v. M. C. R. R. Co., 79 Maine, 397; Welch v. Bath Iron Works, 98 Maine, 361; Erickson v. Monson Consolidated Slate Co., 100 Maine, 107. And this duty the defendant could not delegate to another so as to escape responsibility. Welch v. Bath Iron Works, supra; Donnelly v. Granite Co., 90 Maine, 110. In giving, or failing to give, warning of hidden dangers, Wood was not a fellow servant of the plaintiff. In this particular he represented the
But in this connection it should be said that the defendant was not bound to give the plaintiff warning of all possible, concealed, or unknown, dangers incident to the use of the machine, but only of such as might expose him to injury in the course of his employment, that is to say, while doing his work in the way he was told to do it, if told at all, or if not told, in any way in which he might reasonably be expected to do it, taking into account his age, intelligence and experience.
According to the version of the facts as given by the plaintiff, he was told in the beginning to take the straw away from the machine, — "the straw that piled' up.” Very soon the machine clogged once, as it seems it was apt to do, if a large or untangled "wad” of straw was fed into it. It is conceded that the clogging was in the iron rolls which conducted the straw to the knives, and not in the knives themselves. But it is claimed for the plaintiff that he understood that the straw was clogged in the knives. He says that at the time of this clogging Wood told him "to keep it clear.” He testifies to no other or further direction by Wood. Sometime afterwards he emptied his baskets, and when he came back a pile of straw had accumulated on the floor. He put this into one basket, and in so doing he cleaned up nearly all that was on the floor. He then took the other basket, and placing it before him, stood in front of the spout and caught the straw as it came down, — to use his expression,— "combed it right down into the basket with both hands, dog paddle style.” While he was doing this, the machine clogged again. He noticed that it was shaking, and he "went to pull the straw away,” and got his fingers into the knives.
It may well be doubted whether, in view of the character of the work to which the plaintiff was assigned, there was any duty on
It is, however, unnecessary to determine whether the plaintiff’s propositions of fact are sustainable, for it is clear that the defendant’s laát contention, namely, that the contributory negligence of the plaintiff contributed to his injury, must be sustained.
The plaintiff was bound to show not only the defendant’s negligence, but affirmatively that no want of due care on his own part contributed to the injury. Colomb v. P. & B. St. Ry., 100 Maine, 418. And on this point we state the situation as it is stated by the plaintiff’s counsel in argument. It is claimed by him that the cause of the clogging of the machine was irregular feeding by Wood; that the straw choked in the rolls before it got to the knives, and but little then came out of the spout; that the plaintiff, in his ignorance and inexperience, thought the reason more straw did not come out of the spout was because it was choked in the spout, and
Assuming all this to be true, we cannot resist the conclusion that it was gross carelessness, — a piece of foolhardiness, — even for a person of his age, to put his hands out of sight under the hood, into a place where he knew that knives or some other appliances were cutting the straw. His testimony shows that he is a young man of a good degree of intelligence, and he must have known, if he used that intelligence, that he could not remove the straw from the cutting apparatus, whatever it was, without the liability of getting his hands into dangerous proximity to the apparatus itself. The knives were beyond his sight. He did not know where they were. And this made it all the more careless for him to do what he did. Though the age and intelligence of a party are always important factors in determining whether due care has been used, yet the plaintiff was bound to use that degree or extent of care which ordinarily prudent persons of his age and intelligence are accustomed to use under like circumstances. Colomb v. P. & B. St. Ry., supra. Measuring the plaintiff’s conduct by this standard, we think it must be held to be careless. If the plaintiff himself had been asked, before the accident, if it would be safe to put hands, with the machine in operation, in the place where he afterwards put his, we think it hardly admits of a doubt that he would have answered, "No.”-
It is unnecessary to consider the exceptions.
Motion sustained.
New trial granted.