delivered the opixiox oe the Court.-
The plaintiff in error sought, in this, an action on the case, to recover damages from the defendant in error for an injury to her left hand, which was caught and crushed between the rolls or cylinders of a machine, called a mangle, which she, as his servant, was operating in his laundry. It was not complained that the injury was occasioned by reason of any fault or defect in the machinery, but the sole ground on which it was sought to rest a right of recovery was that the plaintiff ivas young and inexperienced, and that the defendant in error negligently failed to advise her of the danger which attended the operation of the machine, or to instruct her as to the means of avoiding such danger. The mangle consisted of a large iron cylinder and two smaller wooden ones in position above it, and the appliances by which they were connected with a steam engine, by means of which the cylinders were pressed together and caused to revolve. The plaintiff in error was engaged in putting or feeding goods that had been washed into the cylinders in order that they might pass between them and be pressed and dried. A mangle is in fact a large wringer. The danger to be apprehended and avoided was that while putting the goods in position to be drawn between the rolls and smoothing any wrinkles that might be found, the hand of the operator might be drawn into and crushed and burned between the revolving rolls. The cylinders were open and uncovered, and the iron one was kept heated. The danger of injury was apparent to one of ordinary intelligence and experience, was incident to the employment, and as such, according to the familiar general rule, was assumed by the servant as one of the ordinary risks of the service. This general rule does not, however, apply to employes who, from, youth, are unable to appreciate and realize the danger to which they are exposed. As to such youthful employes the rule is, that it is the duty of the master to put them in possession of that knowledge, which, to adults, comes from experience and mature judgment. 2 Thomp. Neg. 978; Deer. Neg., Sec. 197; Wood, Master and Servant, 350.
A young and inexperienced workman has, however, no greater right of action for an injury than an older and more experienced hand would have under the same circumstances if the danger and his duty were fully known to him. 14 Amer. and Eng. Ency. of Law, 901-902. The end in view to be accomplished by instructions from the master is to make the servant aware of the danger and of the means of avoiding it. If the servant has sufficient capacity to appreciate the danger or has acquired the knowledge otherwise than by instruction from the master, and is as fully aware of the danger as if instructed and advised as to it, he is under the general rule held to have assumed the peril as incident to the employment. Brick Co. v. Renniger, 140 Ill. 334; Herdman-Harrison Milling Co. v. Spehr, 145 Ill. 329. In order to take her case out of the general rule which held her to have assumed the danger incident to the employment it was incumbent upon the plaintiff in error, in the case at bar, to show that she was ignorant of the peril to which she was exposed and of the means of avoiding it. Herdman-Harrison Milling Co. v. Spehr, supra. It appeared from her own testimony that she ivas in her sixteenth year and had been working in the laundry about two weeks when she was injured. She had worked about ten days receiving the goods as they came through the cylinders, and for three or four days before she was hurt, had been engaged in feeding or putting them into the rolls or cylinders. Her hand was caught while she was smoothing out the wrinkles in a pillow slip which ivas passing through the rolls. How or why it was caught she did not know. She testified that she knew the iron cylinder was hot and if she got her hand in there it would surely be burned; that she knew if she got her hand between the rolls it would be badly hurt. She described the mangle and the manner in which it was to be operated, and stated that she was cautioned when she began to work on the feeding side to be careful, but insisted that she was not informed that the machine iras dangerous, or told that her hand might be caught and hurt between the rolls. The trial judge at the close of the evidence on her behalf directed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant. This ruling Avas, Ave think, correct. The jury could not, ivitliout acting unreasonably, in the eye of the laAV, decide that she did not fully appreciate and realize the danger that necessarily attended the prosecution of the work in which she Avas engaged or that her injury occurred because she had not been properly advised as to the' means of avoiding it. The only means of avoiding the danger Avas to be careful that the hands did not come in contact Avith the rolls and of this she could not have been ignorant. The evidence, with all the inferences Avhich could justifiably be drawn from it, Avas insufficient to support a verdict in her behalf. Had such verdict been returned it would have been the duty of the court to set it aside. When this is the state of case a trial court is not required to submit the issue to the jury but may direct a ATerdict for the defendant. Simmons v. C. & T. R. R. Co., 110 Ill. 340; Bartlett v. International Bank, 119 Ill. 259. Counsel for plaintiff in error insist that the only possible ground upon Avhich the court could have directed a verdict for the defendant was that the evidence shoAved that the negligence of the plaintiff in error contributed to her injury. This is a misapprehension. The doctrine of contributive negligence was not involved. The action of the court rested upon the ground that the injury to the plaintiff resulted from a risk or peril that was incidental to the work which she had engaged to perforin; that she had full knowledge and appreciation of such danger, and that in law she was held to have assumed the risk of injury as a hazard of her employment. The judgment must be affirmed.