Colorado Springs Gazette Co. v. Simmons

22 Colo. App. 303
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1912
DocketNo. 3457
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Colo. App. 303 (Colorado Springs Gazette Co. v. Simmons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colorado Springs Gazette Co. v. Simmons, 22 Colo. App. 303 (Colo. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Hurlbut, J.

Action by appellee (plaintiff below) against appellant (defendant) for injuries sustained while in defendant’s employ.

The evidence tends to show that on August 25, 1907, defendant employed plaintiff in its printing establishment as janitor, and that among other duties assigned him was that of daily sweeping out a room known as the ad” room, in which was located an electric type-metal cutting machine, to which was attached a saw used in trimming the type-metal for the linotype machines. The scraps or trimmings fell to the floor under the machine, and plaintiff was required to remove them daily. While he was engaged in removing these scraps, on August 29th, his head came in contact with the machine, and he received serious injuries from the electric current passing through the machine. The machine had a base of about eighteen inches in diameter, and extended up in cone shape to the height of a man’s waist. On top of the pedestal was a platform upon which the metal was placed in order to be moved against the saw to be trimmed. About half way up the pedestal was a lever which turned the current on or off from the machine. Under the said tQp was a starting box, near which was a lever which moved to the right or left, to start or stop the saw as desired. It was the custom of the employees to leave the switch on the pedestal open when quitting work, thus permitting the current to pass into the machine. No evidence was offered by defendant at the [306]*306trial. There is no evidence that any one saw plaintiff just at the moment of the accident, but he was, discovered by defendant’s employees almost immediately thereafter. Smoke was seen by them, coming from the machine, and at the same time they detected a disagreeable odor as of burning flesh. One employee was only five feet from plaintiff when he was injured. Plaintiff’s head was held tight against the starting box by the electric current, and fell away only when the fuse was jerked out of the fuse box on the wall. The evidence is undisputed that plaintiff did not know the cutting machine was operated by electricity, nor had he been informed by defendant of that fact, neither had he in any way been cautioned as to the necessity for care on his part in picking up the scraps from around the machine, nor of any danger connected therewith..

As we read the evidence it is improbable that the accident would have occurred had the current been turned off at the switch in the pedestal when the other employees ceased work for the day.

Appellant contends that grave error was committed by the trial court in giving certain instructions to the jury and in refusing to give others requested by it.

The jury, among other things, were instructed that there was no presumption that the defendant was negligent; that before plaintiff could recover they must find, from a preponderance of the evidence, that the injuries sustained by him were proximately and directly the result of the negligence of defendant; that even if they found the defendant guilty of negligence, still, if the plaintiff could have avoided the accident by exercising ordinary care, [307]*307the verdict should be for defendant; that plaintiff was to be regarded as having assumed all risks naturally and reasonably incident to the service in which he was engaged, and those arising from dangers which were open and obvious, or which would have been known to him had he exercised reasonable care; that, in order to entitle plaintiff to recover on account of defendant’s failure to instruct him in regard to his duties or the dangers relative to said machine, he must establish, first, that defendant was chargeable with actual or constructive knowledge of the risk or danger existing, and that plaintiff was likely to be injured by coming in contact with the machine, second, that at the time of the injury plaintiff did not know and could not have learned by exercise of ordinary care that danger or risk existed, third, that defendant knew or ought to have known that plaintiff was excusably ignorant of the risk, and by reason thereof was exposed to abnormal hazard; and that it was the duty of the master to exercise ordinary care in seeing that his servants were provided with a reasonably safe place in which to work, and to exercise the same care in maintaining such place in a reasonably safe condition, but that such duty does not amount to warrant of perfection in such places, or a guaranty on defendant’s part of absolute safety, etc.

If these instructions are measured by the authorities cited by appellant it will be found that they are well within the law as therein laid down.

The record indicates that the lower court paid close attention throughout the trial and exercised a high degree of care in conducting the proceedings, and particularly to the settling of the instructions. [308]*308In fact defendant’s rights throughout appear to have been carefully guarded. A careful perusal of the record and briefs convinces us that the court’s rulings are supported by reason and authority.

Appellant also contends that the complaint as drawn founds the action solely upon the statement that the cutting machine was in a defective condition and out of repair, and that by reason thereof defendant was negligent and the injury to plaintiff occurred. Were this the case appellant’s position would be sound, and a reversal of the judgment would necessarily follow. But on reading the complaint we find counsel are in error in assuming the facts to be as claimed. In paragraph four of the complaint it is alleged that prior to and after plaintiff’s employment the cutting machine had been in a defective condition and out of repair, that the insulation thereof and wires attached thereto were so defective as to permit the current of electricity used in operating same to be transmitted to any one coming near or in contact with any part of the machine, but nowhere in the paragraph is it alleged that this constituted negligence on the part of defendant. In paragraph six, however, it is alleged that it was the duty of plaintiff, every afternoon, after employees ceased work, to remove the pieces of metal filings from around and under the machine; that while he was so engaged on the afternoon of August 29th, defendant had not turned the current off in said machine, but had carelessly and negligently left the same turned on, thereby causing a dangerous current of electricity to pass through it; that defendant had thereby, negligently and carelessly, greatly, increased the hazard and danger to any one coming [309]*309near or in contact with same; and that, while the machine was defective and out of order as stated, and while the current was passing through the same, plaintiff, while performing his duties, came in contact with the machine and sustained the injuries of which he complains.

Appellant calls our attention to the two following cases. In Elkton Con. M. & M. Co. v. Sullivan, 41 Colo., 241, it was alleged in the complaint that the negligence of defendant consisted in permitting a defective jog to remain in the shaft at a certain point; that the cage struck said jog in ascending the shaft and jarred a piece of steel from the arms of the deceased, which caught in the side of the shaft and threw him against the cage and killed him. The evidence showed that the accident did not occur at the jog, that the cage was running smoothly at the time, and that the injury occurred by reason of the steel slipping out of defendant’s hand.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Colo. App. 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colorado-springs-gazette-co-v-simmons-coloctapp-1912.