Morancy v. Hennessey

52 A. 1021, 24 R.I. 205, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 26, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 52 A. 1021 (Morancy v. Hennessey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morancy v. Hennessey, 52 A. 1021, 24 R.I. 205, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 52 (R.I. 1902).

Opinion

Eogers, J.

This is the plaintiff’s petition for a' new trial *206 in an action on the case for negligence after a nonsuit in the Common Pleas Division.

On January 22, 1900, the plaintiff, a girl seventeen years old lacking one month and three days, was injured by having her right hand drawn between the rollers, or cylinders, of a mangle she was tending while working for the defendants in their steam laundry.

According to the plaintiff’s testimony she went to work for the defendants the first part of August, 1899, to fold and shake out clothes, there being a place vacant there for doing that work. For five or six weeks she worked exclusively at folding and shaking out clothes, which was done in the same room with the mangle and not far from it, the clothes being folded and shaken out for the purpose of putting them on the mangle. After working at shaking out clothes for five or six weeks the plaintiff was put to work tending the mangle by the “boss” of that machine, not without objection but upon being told by.the “boss,” one Katie Griffin, that if the plaintiff would not work on the machine she would tell Mr. Hennessey, the plaintiff consented without further objection to work upon it, and from the middle or latter part of September, 1899, until January 22, 1900, when she got hurt, she had worked on the machine the greater part of the time, being about four months. Though the plaintiff had never worked in a laundry before' she was employed by the defendants she swore she knew how to run the mangle at the time of the accident and that Mamie Walsh a girl who worked on it, had shown her. In cross-examination she swore in answer to interrogatories as follows : “ Q. 113. Who was the person that told you,to go to work on the machine? A. Katiq Griffin. Q. 114. Did she have charge of the machine? A. Yes sir. Q. 115. She gave you some instructions about not getting your hand in ? A. All she said when I went on the machine was to be careful or my hand would be hurt. Q. 116. And you understood you were to be careful and not get your hand into the rollers ? A. Yes sir.” This warning by Katie Griffin was in addition to the plaintiff’s being shown by Mamie Walsh. That the plaintiff’s objection to Katie Griffin about *207 working on the machine, if not merely formal, was, at least, of very short continuance, is apparent, for the plaintiff swore in answer to “Q. 99. Did you ask for additional pay? A. Yes. I went and asked Mr. Hennessey for more pay and he asked me for what and I told him I was working on the machine and he said he wouldn’t give me more pay because he didn’t put me on there.” Her continuing to work on that machine, therefore, after that interview would seem to have been an act of her own volition.

The mangle was a machine for drying and ironing clothes and consisted of a hot cylinder and a roller both revolving, between which the clothes were passed while damp and were thus dried and ironed. The plaintiff and another girl were tending or feeding the mangle on one side of the rolls while two other girls were tending it on the other side. The tending or feeding the machine referred to consisted in placing sheets, which they were then engaged at, upon a table or board connected with the machine, lapping the sheets upon a piece of canvass so as to draw them between the rolls or cylinders. If the sheets stuck the tenders were to push them so that the cylinders would the better draw them. The plaintiff swore that the table was rough and the corner of a damp sheet turned up and caught, and, as she was pushing it to go through, the sheet gave way and her hand slipped and was drawn between the rolls and burnt and crushed. She swore she had never complained that the table was rough. The plain • tiff likewise swore that there was a guard on the machine, which it was contended was not sufficient to protect her hand from going into the hot cylinder. The cylinders were revolving in plain sight and the plaintiff was feeding in one side or edge of the sheet and the girl working by her side was feeding in the other side of the sheet.

The testimony for the plaintiff consisted of her own testimony describing the accident, and that of a medical man as to the extent of the plaintiff’s injuries. At the conclusion thereof the plaintiff was nonsuited, and the question is, was the nonsuit properly granted ?

The plaintiff declares in substance in the various counts of *208 her declaration that the defendants were guilty of negligence in this, that being of the age of, to wit, seventeen years and of less intelligence than the average intelligence of girls of her age, of which the defendants had knowledge, or, from her appearance and other facts within the defendants’ knowledge, ought to have had knowledge, she was set to work on a dangerous machine, to wit, a mangle, in the-use of which she was inexperienced, and the perils and dangers of which she did not know and failed to appreciate, but which the defendants knew and neglected to give her proper instructions how to properly perform her duties in such employment, and to give her proper and sufficient warning and notice of the perils and dangers of working at said machine, and to guard said machine or protect the plaintiff against it, and allowed said machine to become defective and remain in a defective condition, in some manner of which she, the said plaintiff, had no knowledge, but which was known to the defendants, or might have been known to them by the exercise of due care and diligence.

Great stress was laid in the declaration that the plaintiff was below' the average intelligence for her years, which statement was reiterated by her counsel in his argument in this court, but no witness was called and no question was asked tending to show the truth of such statement. Neither her father and next friend, nor any of her relatives, nor the girls that had been daily working with her for months were called on to testify on that point, nor, in the opinion of the court, does the record of her testimony in the jury trial give any indication of such lack of intelligence. In Ciriack v. Merchants Woolen Co., 151 Mass. 152, 155, where question as to the intelligence of the plaintiff, a b'oy twelve years of age, was made, it appears that ££the plaintiff introduced numerous witnesses, who testified that the plaintiff was at the time of the accident a boy of less than the average intelligence of boys of his age.” We do not think that an allegation in the declaration, supported alone by the reiteration of counsel, forms a sufficient substitute for evidence. There was also an utter absence of proof that the defendants knew or believed, *209 or, in the exercise -of due care, had any reason to know or believe, that the plaintiff was in any way lacking in the degree of intelligence usually found in girls of her age.

There was also lacking any proof to show that the machine was defective in any way, or not sufficiently guarded, or out of the ordinary use in such machines. Indeed the only reference in the testimony as to the condition of the machine was that given by the plaintiff as to certain changes made after the accident in the location of the guard, and incident thereto, but it is a well settled rule of law that evidence of precautions against further accidents taken after an accident is not competent to show antecedent negligence. As said by Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 A. 1021, 24 R.I. 205, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morancy-v-hennessey-ri-1902.