Martel v. White Mills

111 A. 237, 79 N.H. 439, 1920 N.H. LEXIS 38
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 1, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 111 A. 237 (Martel v. White Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martel v. White Mills, 111 A. 237, 79 N.H. 439, 1920 N.H. LEXIS 38 (N.H. 1920).

Opinion

Plummer, J.

The plaintiff’s evidence tended to prove the following facts. The plaintiff was employed in the defendants’ cotton mill to *440 grind and repair their cards. He had been thus employed for a year and a half before his injury. The accident occurred on a dark, cloudy morning, a few minutes after seven, October 19, 1917.

When the plaintiff came to work that morning, the second hand informed him that a card was wet, and needed drying. The plaintiff immediately went to the card, stopped it, and after going upstairs and putting on his overalls, returned to the card, and took out its feed-roll (its cotton-rolls already had been removed). He then started to go upstairs to obtain some whiting to use in drying the card, but on his way he remembered that there was no whiting, and went back to the card and took some waste, and rubbed it across the feed-plate once or twice, when his fingers were caught, and drawn into the licker-in, and injured. When he started to wipe the feed-plate he did not notice the card was running. He could have seen it was running if he had looked, but he had just stopped it, and supposed it was not in operation. There was a well-known and strictly enforced rule of the defendants that where a card was out of order, and was stopped to be repaired, no-one should start it except the repair man. On the morning of the accident the card in question and the floor about it were wet, and it was plain to be seen that-the machine was not in condition to operate. The room where the plaintiff was injured contained two rows of cards, fifteen cards in a row.

When the plaintiff was at work about the card that morning, before the accident, there were two employees working two'or three cards beyond where the plaintiff was, at a distance of about fifteen feet. One of these men by the name of Belanger operated the row of fifteen cards that included the card involved in the accident. The other emplóyee operated the other row of cards, but they worked together in stripping the cards. Belanger as he stood was facing, and in full view of the plaintiff, and the other operative was standing with his back to the plaintiff. Nine or ten other employees, who were working in another part of the room, were not visible from the place where the accident occurred.'

If it could be found upon the plaintiff’s evidence that the accident was caused by the negligent act of an employee of the defendants, this ’would establish their liability, unless it appeared “by a preponderance of evidence that the negligence of the plaintiff contributed” to cause the accident. Laws 1911, c. 163, s. 2.

It is claimed by the defendants that it could not be found that Belanger or any other employee of the defendants started the card in the absence of the plaintiff. The evidence was that the card was *441 not in operation when the plaintiff left the room; that it was running when he returned; that no one was in the room except the employees of the defendants, and that the card would not have started except by human aid. Therefore the jury would be amply justified in concluding that an employee started the card. The defendants say that, if an employee did negligently start the card after the plaintiff had stopped it for the purpose of repairs, he was transgressing a well-known and never-violated rule of the defendants, and that in-so doing he was not within the scope of his employment, and therefore the defendants would not be liable for his negligent act. If this position might be maintained at common law, it cannot be sustained under the above statute, which applies to this case. That act provides that if personal injury by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment is caused to a workman by the negligence of a co-employee, the employer is liable. And if the employee in starting the card, which the plaintiff had stopped, was violating a rule of the defendants, he was, nevertheless, under a liberal construction of the statute their employee for whose negligence they were responsible. The statute (Laws 1911, c. 163) upon which this action is founded is remedial in its nature, and as such should, and has received a liberal construction in this state. Boody v. Company, 77 N. H. 208; Wheeler v. Contoocook Mills, 77 N. H. 551; Barber v. Company, ante, 311.

The defendants contend that the plaintiff’s contributory negligence precludes his recovery in this action; that his conduct in rubbing the feed-plate with waste, without observing that the card was running, demonstrates his inexcusable carelessness.

It cannot be held as a matter of law that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence unless the evidence so plainly and clearly establishes that fact that no reasonable man could come to any other conclusion. If the situation is such that ordinary men might differ in determining the question of the plaintiff’s carelessness, it is the judgment of the jury that is required, and “the court cannot usurp the province of the jury, or decide as a matter of law what is plainly a question of fact.” Demars v. Company, 67 N. H. 404, 406; Roberts v. Railroad, 69 N. H. 354; Whitcher v. Railroad, 70 N. H. 242, 246; Minot v. Railroad, 74 N. H. 230, 234; Goodale v. York, 74 N. H. 454; Kelland v. Company, 75 N. H. 168, 170; Weeks v. Company, 78 N. H. 26, 30.

The cotton-card upon which the plaintiff was injured was largely covered in, but the evidence tended to prove that there was a pulley at either end of the machine that was exposed to view, and there was *442 an open space over the licker-in of an inch and a half. If one approaching the card noticed, he could tell if it were in operation, for he could see whether the pulleys and the licker-in were revolving. If the plaintiff when he first entered the room- in the morning had met with the accident in question, his carelessness in not observing that the machine was in operation would have been inexcusable. The circumstances, however, that produced the accident were peculiar. The facts deducible from the evidence are that the plaintiff just previous to the accident stopped the card; that, when he left it to obtain some waste, it was at rest, and would have remained so if it had not been put in motion by some person; that he was absent for only a minute or two; that he was fully aware of the well-known and inviolate rule of the defendants that.no one should start the card after he had stopped it for repairs except himself, and the appearance of the card plainly indicated that it was out of repair, and the removal of the feed-roll and of the cotton-rolls showed that it was not equipped for operation. The jury might well conclude under such conditions that the plaintiff was not guilty of negligence in failing to look and see if the machine were in operation before he began to rub the feed-plate; that it was not unreasonable for him to assume that the card was at rest, and to commence his work upon it without thinking to notice whether it was in motion. “Precaution is a duty only so far as there is reason for apprehension.” Shea v. Railroad, 69 N. H.

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Bluebook (online)
111 A. 237, 79 N.H. 439, 1920 N.H. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martel-v-white-mills-nh-1920.