Continental Gin Co. v. Milbrat

WALKER, P. J.

This was an action to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff (the appellee here) while acting as an employee of the defendant and engaged in work at a machine called a joiner. In different counts the injuries were attributed to, respectively, the slippery condition of the floor at the place where, the'plaintiff had to stand in using the joiner; to the fact that the joiner had no guard between the knife or saws on it and the point where the plaintiff was working — each of these alleged causes of the injuries being alleged to be a defect in the ways, works, machinery, or plant of the defendant, which arose from or had not been discovered or remedied owing to the negligence of the defendant or of some person in its employment who was intrusted by it with the duty of seeing that its ways, works, machinery, or plant wer.e in proper condition, to the fact that the floor at the place the plaintiff was required to be or stand while engaged in the operation of said machine was defective and unsafe as a place for the plaintiff to be or stand while engaged in work at said machine; and to the negligence of one, Rump, a person in the service or employment of the defendant, who had superintendence intrusted to him, whilst in the exercise of such- superintendence, in that he negligently caused or allowed plaintiff’s hand or -fingers to be caught in said machine. The case was tried on issues joined on the plea of not guilty and two special pleas of contributory negligence.

*355An exception was reserved to the following statement made in the oral charge of the court in reference to the defense of contributory negligence:

“And I charge you, as the law applying to that question, a servant must do that which is dangerous in a negligent manner in order to constitute contributory negligence on his part.”

The ruling embodied in this statement must be considered in the light of the pleadings and evidence in the case and in connection with what was said by the court on the same subject in other parts of its charge. In the next succeeding sentence the court, speaking of the defense of contributory negligence, said:

“It would be your duty under the evidence to come to the conclusion that this work was done, although he knew it urns dangerous, in a negligent manner by the plaintiff before the plea of contributory negligence would be available to the defendant.”

The practical import of these statements, considered together, as they should be, was that, even if the work the plaintiff was engaged- in at the time he was hurt ivas dangerous, and was known to him to be dangerous, the pleas of contributory negligence could not be sustained, unless the jury found from the evidence that he did that work in a negligent manner. As applicable to the pleadings and evidence in the case, the instruction to this effect was not erroneous. There were two pleas of contributory negligence; one of them setting up the negligent failure of the pliantiff to use the guard provided for said joining machine; the other that, while the plaintiff was planing or edging a piece of timber in said joining machine, he negligently allowed his hand to slip off of said piece of- timber and come in contact with the knife of said machine, whereby his hand was caught and injured. It is to be observed that what was set up *356in each of these pleas was the alleged negligent manner of the plaintiff’s use of the machine at the time he was hurt. Neither of these pleas properly could be sustained, unless the jury found from the evidence that the plaintiff was negligent in the manner of doing that in which he was engaged when the injury complained of was sustained. This is equally true whether the work was dangerous or not, and whether the plaintiff did or did not know of danger. As nothing was set up as contributory negligence, except the negligent manner in which the plaintiff made use of the machine by which he was hurt, the appellant has nothing to complain of in a charge to the effect that tbe defense of contributory negligence could not be sustained unless the jury found from the evidence that the plaintiff did that work, whether it was dangerous or not, in a negligent manner. Whether the proposition excepted to, as stated by die court in general terms, is or is not correct in all cases to which it might be applied, it was not incorrect when applied to the pleadings and evidence in this particular case. The statement being a correct one so far as the jury had any occasion to make application of it, the appellant could not have been harmed by the fact that the ruling was expressed in such general terms that it may be questionable or incorrect if applied in some case other than the one at bar. It is not necessary to pass upon the question of the correctness or incorrectness of the general proposition the statement of which was excepted to.

The ground upon which it is contended in argument that the defendant was entitled to have given the general affirmative charge requested by it as to the count based on a defect in the joiner is that the absence of a guard, which was the defect alleged, could not, under the evidence, be regarded as a defect, as the testimony *357showed that the machine, as it was originally constructed and equipped was not provided with any guard at all, and that a guard was not a part of the machine. The drum of the woodworking machine in question was encircled by blades or knives, parts of which extended through a hole above the surface of the bench or table beside which the user of the machine stood. There was evidence tending to prove that long before the plaintiff was hurt the absence of some device to protect one using the machine from the danger of contact with the rapidly revolving blades by which timber was cut or trimmed was recognized by the defendant as a defect in the machine, and it introduced testimony which tended to prove that it had remedied the defect by supplying a guard, which was not permanently attached to the machine, but, when not in use, was hung on a post near by, and posting directions to those who worked at the machine to make use of the guard'. The testimony of the plaintiff tended to prove that there was no guard on or about the machine at the time he was hurt. If the use of the machine had revealed the fact that it needed another piece or attachment, which could readily be supplied, to render it capable of safe operation in the work for which it was used, it was defective in not having the needed piece or attachment, though the maker of the machine had omitted to supply it with any safety device, and though an appropiate one might not be permanently attached to the machine. — Huyck v. McNerney, 163 Ala. 244, 50 South. 926; Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Mobley, 139 Ala. 425, 36 South. 181.

If we regarded none of the evidence which is set out in the bill of exceptions as having a tendency to prove that the lack of a guard constituted a defect in the machinery or plant of the defendant, yet we could not affirm that the trial court was in error in holding that *358there was such evidence. While the bill of exceptions recites that the evidence which it sets out was all the evidence introduced on the trial, it contains in its report of the evidence conclusive proof of the incorrectness of this recital as to evidence bearing upon the inquiry as to whether or not the lack of a guard, was a defect which arose from, or had not been discovered or remedied owing to, the negligence of the defendant or some person in its service who was intrusted by it with the duty of seeing that the ways, works, machinery, or plant were in proper condition. It shows that what purported to be a model of the machine at which the plaintiff was working when he was hurt was used by the witnesses in testifying in reference to it, and that the jury visited the 'defendant’s factory and had exhibited to them a machine which the defendant claimed was the one at which the plaintiff was working when he was hurt. The bill of exceptions does not enable us to apprehend the evidential significance of ocular demonstrations and illustrations made in the presence of the jury; an example of the failure to reproduce which is shown by the following extract from the testimony of one of the defendant’s witnesses:

“That is one of our guards; that part had to come back from the knives so as not to cut it, and it had holes here with pins to drop in and hold it in position, and there were other holes in the table in line with these holes. Say this is the guide, and I would, want to plane an inch plank, the proper way would be to put this on there, covering that much, and put this here, so there would be space enough, and fasten the screws and drop that in that position, so if your hand fell off it would drop on the board, and if you wanted it this wide you would draw it back that much,” etc.

*359■Testimony of an opposing tendency is similarly set out. Such a report of the testimony does not disclose the meaning which was conveyed to those Avho saAv the things to Avhich the witnesses pointed and made references. As the record does not make knoAvn to this court all the evidence which was before the trial court bearing upon the charge made in one of the counts of the complaint, the ruling of that court as to the sufficiency of the evidence adduced to support the averments of that count cannot intelligently be revieAved. An appellate court cannot pass upon the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant the submission to the jury of an issue in the case when it is not informed what that evidence was. It follows that the judgment appealed from cannot .be reversed, because of a ruling Avhich the record does not show to have been erroneous. — Warble v. Sulzberger Co. of America, 64 South. 361; Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Redd, 6 Ala. App. 404, 60 South. 468.

In the fourth count of the complaint the alleged injury was attributed to the defective and unsafe condition of the floor at the place Avhere the plaintiff Avas required to be or stand while engaged in operating the machine, and it Avas averred that said defect arose from, or had not been discovered or remedied owing to, the negligence of the defendant or of some person in the service or employment of the defendant and intrusted by it with the duty of seeing that its ways, Avorks, machinery, or plant Avere in proper condition. The testimony of the plaintiff as to the spilling of oil or grease on the floor at the place where he stood Avas such as to furnish some support for an inference that this had been such a common occurrence before the time he Avas hurt, that some coemployee, who Avas-intrusted Avith the duty of seeing that the place was in-proper condition must either have knoAvn of it or have been chargeable *360with negligence in failing to discover or to remedy the resulting slippery and defective condition of the floor. We are of opinion that there was evidence tending to prove the material averments of the count in question, and that the court was not in error in refusing to give written charge 2, requested by the defendant.

It is contended that written charge 3, requested by the defendant, should have been given, because of the absence of - any evidence tending to prove that Rump was a person intrusted by the defendant with superintendence, as alleged in the fifth count. There is no merit in this contention. The testimony of Rump himself, who was a witness for the defendant, tended to prove that he was a superintendent, charged with the duty of caring for the safety of the plaintiff, his subordinate coemployee. — St. Louis & San Francisco R. Co. v. Brantley, 168 Ala. 579, 590, 53 South. 305.

The refusal of the court to give written charge 7, requested by the defendant, was justifiable, because of its assumption of the existence of a fact as to which the evidence was in conflict. It assumes that there was a guard on the joiner. The plaintiff testified that the machine did not have any guard at all.'

No reversible error is found in the record.

Affirmed.