Bowring v. Wilmington Malleable Iron Co.

66 A. 369, 21 Del. 594, 5 Penne. 594, 1905 Del. LEXIS 62
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 19, 1905
DocketNo. 70
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 A. 369 (Bowring v. Wilmington Malleable Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowring v. Wilmington Malleable Iron Co., 66 A. 369, 21 Del. 594, 5 Penne. 594, 1905 Del. LEXIS 62 (Del. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

See facts in charge of Court.

Pennewill, J.,

charging the jury :

Gentlemen of the jury:—This is an action brought by Sam Bowring, the plaintiff, to recover damages from the Wilmington Malleable Iron Company for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of said company. W e decline to give you binding instructions as requested by the defendant in its first prayer. It is claimed by the plaintiff that the defendant was negligent in furnishing him with an unsafe and dangerous machine, known as a jointer or buzz plainer, to be used in connection with the work he was employed and directed to do as a pattern maker; that in using such machine, on the first day of January 1904, at the works or shops of the defendant in this city, for the purpose of planing the surface of a board and taking therefrom an eighth of an inch cut, the board was kicked or thrown from his hands, resulting in his right hand being plunged into the revolving knives of the machine, the fingers and thumb thereof cut, torn and lacerated to such an extent that some of the fingers had to be amputated; and that by reason of such injuries he suffered much pain, and also suffered great loss on account of his alleged inability to follow his trade of pattern-maker. The plaintiff has averred in his declaration that said machine was, unsafe in several respects, but has offered evidence in support of only two of these averments: (1) That the machine was unsafe because the power used to revolve the knives was applied by such a negligent and careless arrangement of the shafts or gearing that the knives revolved at a dangerously slow rate of speed; and (2) because the rear table of the jointer machine, between which [596]*596and the front or receiving table the knives revolved, was fixed at a lower plane or level than the periphery or highest point reached by the knives in their revolutions. The plaintiff claims that the board he was working upon at the time of the accident was kicked or thrown from his hands, and his injuries happened because of one or the other of such unsafe features of the machine, or a combination of the two; that it was the duty of the master and not of the servant, to see that said rear table, called by the plaintiff the permanent table, was at all times in a safe condition, and properly adjusted, and that the risk was not such as the servant assumed in the discharge of his duties.

The defendant company claims that the said machine was reasonably safe for the work it was designed to do and adapted to the purpose of the employment; it denies that the company was guilty of any negligence that caused the injury to the plaintiff, and insists that if there was any such negligence it was the negligence of the plaintiff and not of the defendant.

The company contends that the plaintiff made application to it for work as a journeyman pattern maker, that is, a pattern maker, who had fully served his apprenticeship at such trade and was an experienced and competent workman in the line of the employment he sought; that he was employed as such experienced workman, and that if the rear table was too low at the time he undertook the work which resulted in his injury, it was his duty to adjust it before commencing his work, and if the knives of the machine resolved dangerously slow, the danger from such cause was not latent and concealed but patent, apparent and obvious, and if the plaintiff saw fit to use the machine under such conditions, he assumed the risk and can not hold the company liable. The relation existing between the defendant company and the plaintiff at the time of the accident was that of master and servant, and the primary duty imposed upon the defendant towards the plaintiff' in the course of his employment by reason of this relation was to furnish him reasonably safe tools, ¿aachinery and appliances with which to work. The tools or machinery used need not be of the safest, best nor of the most improved [597]*597kind. It is sufficient if they are reasonably safe, and adapted to the purpose of the employment. If the master fails to observe this rule of law and injury results to his servant from such failure, he becomes liable therefor on the ground of negligence. In the performance of this duty the master must use all reasonable care and prudence for the safety of the servant, having regard to the character of the work to be performed. Such care must be in proportion to the danger of the employment. The servant has the right to rely on the master for the performance of this duty without inquiry on his part. The servant assumes no risk whatever as to such primary duty at the time he enters upon his employment; but he does assume all the ordinary risks incident to the employment, such as are patent, seen and known, or which may be seen and known by the ordinary use of his senses. And he is required to exercise due care and caution in the course of his employment to avoid dangers and injuries; for the master, having performed the primary duties required of him, is not an insurer of the safety of his servants.

It is the duty of the master also to maintain said tools and machinery in a reasonably safe condition so long as they are continued in use. ' If the master knows, or by the use of due diligence might know that the tools and machinery in use in his business are not reasonably safe it is negligence on his part to fail to remedy and correct the defects of which he has knowledge or by the exercise of due diligence he might discover. Notice to the foreman or person in general charge of the business, that the machinery is unsafe or dangerous, is, in law, notice to the master; and after the receipt of such notice it would be negligence on the part of the master to fail to make such machinery reasonably safe for the servant in his employment. But in such case the master would not be liable if the servant having knowledge of such defect continued to use such machinery. The servant must always exercise such care and caution to avoid danger as the circumstances reasonably require, and the greater the danger the greater the care, diligence and caution required.

This action is based, as you have doubtless observed, upon neg[598]*598ligence, and it will be for you to determine whether it was the negligence of the defendant company that caused the injuries of the plaintiff; because if they were caused by the negligence of the plaintiff himself, or of any one else, or from any cause other than the negligence of the defendant, the plaintiff can not recover. The burden of proving that it was the negligence of the defendant that caused the injury, is cast upon the plaintiff, and it must be proved to your satisfaction by a preponderance of the evidence. Negligence is never presumed and this applies as well to contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, and the burden of proving it rests upon the defendant, if it does not appear from the testimony produced by the plaintiff.

The burden of proving that the servant had knowledge before the accident of the particular defect in the machine likewise rests upon the defendant, unless the jury believe from the testimony of the plaintiff, or other evidence in the case, including the knowledge and experience of the plaintiff, that he knew or should have known of the defect complained of.

Negligence, in legal contemplation, is the want of ordinary care that is, the want of such care as an ordinarily prudent and careful man would use under similar circumstances.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 A. 369, 21 Del. 594, 5 Penne. 594, 1905 Del. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowring-v-wilmington-malleable-iron-co-delsuperct-1905.