Mott v. Packard

80 A. 279, 108 Me. 247, 1911 Me. LEXIS 80
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 19, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 80 A. 279 (Mott v. Packard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mott v. Packard, 80 A. 279, 108 Me. 247, 1911 Me. LEXIS 80 (Me. 1911).

Opinion

Haley, J.

This is an action brought by Forest L. Mott, a minor, by his father as next friend, against John D. Packard et als. to recover for personal injuries received by him while in the employ of the defendants. The plaintiff, at the time he received the injuries complained of, was between sixteen and seventeen years of age, and was employed by the defendants in their cracker factory at Auburn, operating a machine known as a breaking machine.

Before the plaintiff came to Maine his father was employed in a cracker factory in Massachusetts upon practically the same kind of a machine, and at times the plaintiff was accustomed to operate the machine for his father, so that when he was placed at work by the defendants upon the machine that caused the injury he had some knowledge of the nature of the machine, and he had been operating the machine upon which the injury occurred some three or four weeks prior to the accident.

The machine is made up of two metal cylinders eight- or nine inches in diameter, which are connected at the right end of the machine with a shafting upon which are a fixed and a loose pulley, the power being furnished by a belt from the shafting to the fixed pulley. At the right end is a shipper, which is used to ship the belt from the fixed pulley to the loose pulley when the machine is not in operation. The tops of the cylinders are in plain sight. The dough to be made into crackers is placed in that part of the machine called the hopper, situated above the cylinders with an incline towards the cylinders, so that the dough of its own weight will fall against the cylinders, and the cylinders, which revolve 140 times a minute, draw the dough through and deposit it upon a table in a thin, flat sheet, from which it is taken and run through another machine and finished for baking.

[249]*249It was the duty of the plaintiff to place the dough in the hopper, and keep it adjusted so that it would pass through the cylinders in proper shape and come out nearly square. On the day of the accident he placed a sheet of dough in the hopper in order that it might be run through the cylinders. On one end of the sheet of dough was a piece of scrap dough, and while placing that scrap of dough under the sheet so that it would not show on top, his hand came in contact with the cylinders and was drawn through them with the dough, and he sustained the injury complained of.

When the plaintiff’s hand began to be drawn between the cylinders, he placed his knee against the table and his left hand upon the top of the hopper, bracing himself in the effort to prevent his hand from being drawn further into the cylinders and made an outcry that attracted the attention of the other workmen, one of whom ran to the shipper at the right of the machine and shipped the belt from the driving pulley on to the loose pulley to stop the machine. The shipper was fastened to the machine by a piece of small wire to prevent it from working off to the loose pulley while the machine was in operation. The first attempt to pull the belt on to the loose pulley failed ; at the next attempt the belt was pulled on to the loose pulley, and the workman ran to the other end of the machine, where there was a heavy fly-wheel attached to one of the cylinders, and placing his hands upon this wheel stopped the machine as quickly as possible and then, reversing the cylinders and turning them in the opposite direction, rolled the plaintiff’s hand from the machine.

At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony the presiding Justice ordered a nonsuit, and the plaintiff brings the case forward upon exceptions to that ruling.

The plaintiff claims that the defendants are liable for the injuries received :

First: Because the plaintiff did not assume the risk of the employment, as he did not fully appreciate the risk of operating the machine.

Second : Because the cylinders or rolls were unguarded.

[250]*250Third: Because the shipper was fastened to the machine by a wire, and when the plaintiff’s fellow-servant attempted to shut off the power it failed to work at the first effort, and the plaintiff’s hand was between the cylinders two or three seconds longer than it would have been if the shipper had not been fastened.

It appears from the testimony of the plaintiff, as well as from the testimony of all the other witnesses, that the cylinders revolved in plain sight of the operator .of the machine, that they drew the doughy through the machine, and that anything that came against them would be drawn through them the same as the dough. It was an obvious danger, in plain view of the plaintiff - whenever he was operating the machine, and he knew of the danger. He testified : "Q. Well, didn’t you know, if you had stopped to think, that if you got your hand in between the rolls that day you would get it pinched? A. I knew if I got them between the rolls I would get them pinched. Q. You knew that perfectly well, didn’t you? A. Yes, sir. Q. And you had knowledge enough of that machine to know that that would be the inevitable result if you got your fingers in there, didn’t you? A. Yes, I would get them pinched.”

No instructions by the master of the danger of having his hand come in contact with the cylinders would have informed the plaintiff of anything that he did not see and did not know, and it was no part of the duty of the master to inform the plaintiff of the dangers that were known to the plaintiff, and which the plaintiff himself testified he knew. It was not a concealed or unknown danger, but one known and seen by the plaintiff, and he must be presumed to have assumed the risk of the employment, unless his age or inexperience prevented him from fully understanding and appreciating the danger of his hand coming in contact with the revolving cylinders. Wyman v. Berry, 106 Maine, 43; Wiley v. Batchelder, 105 Maine, 536; Dempsey v. Sawyer, 95 Maine, 295; Bryant v. Paper Co., 100 Maine, 171.

It is urged that by reason of the immature age of the plaintiff he did not appreciate and understand the danger of his hand coming in contact with the rollers. There is nothing in the case that shows [251]*251that he did not have the ordinary intelligence and understanding of boys of his age, and in the absence of evidence of that nature, he must be presumed to possess such intelligence and understanding. If he had ordinary intelligence and understanding, he could not fail to know that if he put his hand against machinery revolving with the rapidity that these cylinders were revolving he would be injured.

There are many cases holding that boys of the age of this plaintiif, and even younger, must be presumed to know the danger of getting in contact with moving machinery. In Rock v. Indian Orchard Mills, 142 Mass. 522, a boy thirteen years of age was injured by getting his hand into unguarded and rapidly revolving cylinders, and he was presumed to know the danger, and the defendant was held not liable. And in Ciriack v. Merchants Woolen Co., 146 Mass.

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111 P. 899 (Washington Supreme Court, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
80 A. 279, 108 Me. 247, 1911 Me. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mott-v-packard-me-1911.