O'Hare v. Cocheco Manufacturing Co.

51 A. 257, 71 N.H. 104, 1901 N.H. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 9, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 51 A. 257 (O'Hare v. Cocheco Manufacturing Co.) 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
O'Hare v. Cocheco Manufacturing Co., 51 A. 257, 71 N.H. 104, 1901 N.H. LEXIS 25 (N.H. 1901).

Opinion

Parsons, J.

It is not contended that there was any defect in the machine upon which the plaintiff was injured, or that the-, obligation of the master to provide reasonably safe machinery was. not fully performed. Neither is it claimed that the holes in the-cloth, charged as the cause of the plaintiff’s injury, were due to. any carelessness or unskillfulness of the master in the process of manufacture adopted. So far as appears, such defects are liable-to arise in the prevailing methods of making cloth. At least, there is no attempt to prove the contrary. The only ground of negligence alleged against the defendants is that the plaintiff was not informed of the possible or probable occasional.existence of holes-in the cloth.

“ There are limits to the obligation of an employer to point out-the dangers of proper machinery. The obligation is imposed mainly for the sake of the young who have not the experience or power to look out for themselves which are to be éxpected in adults, or, in the case of adults, where there are concealed defects.” Robinska v. Lyman Mills, 174 Mass. 432, 433; Collins v. Car Co., 68 N. H. 196, 197. The master is under no obligation to-give warning of dangers incident to the service of which the servant knows or ought to know. The servant assumes the risk of injury from dangers incident to the service which are obvious, or of which he knows, or which ordinary care would disclose to him. Henderson v. Williams, 66 N. H. 405, 413. It is the duty of the servant “ to use ordinary care to avoid injuries to himself. Pie is-under as great obligation to provide for his own safety from such dangers as are known to him, or discoverable by the exercise of' ordinary care on his part, as the master is to provide it for him. . . . ‘ It is the duty of the employee to go about his work with his eyes open. He cannot wait to be told, but must act affirmatively. He must take ordinary care to learn the dangers that are-likely to beset him in the service. He must not. go blindly to his. work when there is danger. He must inform himself. This is. the law everywhere.’” Wormell v. Railroad, 79 Me. 397, 40.5, 406.

From the plaintiff’s testimony it appears that the taking out of the double edges upon the expander — the operation in which the plaintiff was engaged when injured — was necessary and proper-This being so, the risk of injury in the operation was incident to-the plaintiff’s employment. That there was danger that a person’s, hand placed upon the expander for any purpose might be carried *107 along upon the cloth, or caught in a double edge, hole, or tear in the band of cloth at the seams or elsewhere, and drawn in between the expander and hot roll, producing serious injury, must be obvious to any person of ordinary understanding. But the case does not stand upon this ground, for the plaintiff admits that he fully-understood the danger. He knew that if his finger was caught in the cloth he might be injured precisely as he was injured. He testified he knew that if his finger was caught in a double edge such as he was trying to straighten, he would be injured. With such knowledge, due care required him to endeavor to learn whether any imperfections were likely to occur in the cloth by which his hand would be caught, and the method of avoiding such danger. He testified that he did not know there were holes in the cloth except at the seams where the pieces coming from the-looms were sewed into a continuous band for passage through his. machine. It is not necessary to consider the question whether it can reasonably be found, in the face of all the other evidence in the case, that this statement is true; for a determining question is. whether upon the evidence, considering only that furnished by the-plaintiff, it can with reason be said that the plaintiff would not with ordinary care have learned prior to the accident of the possible existence of such imperfections in the cloth coming to his machine.

There is no evidence that he made any effort in this direction. If the obligation to exercise care could have been satisfied by inquiry of workmen of experience (Burnham v. Railroad, 69 N. H. 280), or by looking without seeing or discovering holes, it is not claimed that he took either precaution. The obligation to exercise care is not satisfied by unexplained absence of action and. thought in a situation of known danger. Gahagan v. Railroad, 70 N. H. 441. The plaintiff had abundant opportunity to learn whether there was anything about the cloth liable to catch his hand upon the expander. He started and stopped his machine, had been engaged upon this work for six months, and for a year previous had been employed in the same mill in and out of the room where his machine and others like it were in operation. He was of mature age, and there is no suggestion that his eyesight or-his intelligence was defective. He had opportunity to examine-the cloth, when not in motion. The case finds that there was-nothing to prevent his seeing the holes in the cloth except the-speed at which it moved as it passed from the ceiling down directly before his eyes as he stood in front of the machine, which was the usual place for his work. He had to guide it into the* machine, take out scrimps as well as double edges, and necessarily had to handle the cloth more or less as it passed along. It usually *108 ran when in motion at a speed of about fifty yards per minute, or two .and one half feet per second, or one and three fourths miles per hour. Nothing prevented his examining the cloth, as it came down from above to his machine, as closely as he desired. While doing his work at the tension bar, the distance of Ms eyes from the cloth -could not exceed the length of Ms arms. The proposition is, whether a man who was looking and attentive could see holes varying from the size of a marble to the size of a man’s head ” in a band of cloth, as the cloth passed before his eyes at arm’s length, at a speed of about one half the rate of an ordinary walk; ■or what is the same thmg, could a man walk at half speed by the •side of a band of cloth at the level of Ms eyes and at arm’s length from him, and, when lookmg at it for the purpose, fail to see holes of the size described ? Admitting the possibility of a difference among reasonable men upon the question whether the plamtiff M fact knew of the possible ’ existence of holes M the cloth •between the seams, it is clear that reasonable men cannot differ in the conclusion that the plaintiff could have seen the holes if he .had exercised care to ascertam whether any imperfections might ■exist in the cloth to cause the danger of which he knew and by which he was injured.

As the plamtiff is chargeable with knowledge which he could have acquired with ordinary care, and as such care would have disclosed to him the danger of which he complains he was not warned, the failure to warn him of a danger of which he knew or ought to have known is not a ground of action against his employer. Crowley v. Pacific Mills, 148 Mass. 228, 230; Rooney v. Company, 161 Mass. 153, 160; Stuart v. Railway, 163 Mass. 391, 393; Kenney v. Company, 168 Mass. 278, 282.

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Bluebook (online)
51 A. 257, 71 N.H. 104, 1901 N.H. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohare-v-cocheco-manufacturing-co-nh-1901.