Saucier v. New Hampshire Spinning Mills

56 A. 545, 72 N.H. 292, 1903 N.H. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 3, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 56 A. 545 (Saucier v. New Hampshire Spinning 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
Saucier v. New Hampshire Spinning Mills, 56 A. 545, 72 N.H. 292, 1903 N.H. LEXIS 66 (N.H. 1903).

Opinion

Bingham, J.

1. One of the grounds upon which the plaintiff relied at the trial to establish the defendants’ negligence was that

*294 the door to the cylinder of the machine upon which he was working had no fastening device upon it to keep it closed, and might have been thrown open by a thick place in the lap which he was-putting through the machine when the accident occurred, and that-he did not know of this alleged danger and was not instructed or warned in respect to it.

In answer to this claim, the defendants were permitted to show by their witness Gould that he had made experiments on the same-machine since the accident, by putting through it the kind of lap that was being carded when the accident occurred, and that it did not throw the door - open. His method was to use a perfect lap, and to put pieces of lap in spots on top of the lap that was being run through the machine and in front of the feed-rolls, to produce a similar condition, with like effect upon the feed-rolls and the door, to that existing at the time of the accident. The only evidence of the condition of the lap in use when the accident took place was that it was an ordinary lap ; but whether it had thick places in it, or differed from the lap used in the experiment, does not appear. The trial judge, when he permitted the testimony in regard to the experiment to be introduced, must have considered that the conditions then made use of were as nearly like those in existence at the time of the accident as could be ascertained from the evidence, and we are of the opinion that he was justified in this conclusion. Colburn v. Groton, 66 N. H. 151. Where the conditions are similar, it has uniformly been held that proof of this character is legally competent. Whitcher v. Railroad, 70 N. H. 242, 248; Cook v. New Durham, 64 N. H. 419; Darling v. Westmoreland, 52 N. H. 401.

2. The plaintiff was a skillful operator upon machines known as revolving-top flat cards. He was employed by the defendants as an experienced stripper. There is a door on these cards opening upon a revolving cylinder covered with card clothing, which should be kept closed except when the card is stripped or ground. All makes of these cards operate the same, but the devices for fastening the doors vary. Some have doors with weighted ends, but on the defendants’ machines the doors were not weighted. There was nothing to keep them closed but their own weight. The plaintiff' did not know the alleged danger of the door being thrown open, and was not warned or instructed in any respect by the defendants. He had never operated cards with doors like these, but the defendants did not know this, and the plaintiff did not inform them of it.

The defendants were entitled to rely upon the plaintiff’s representation that he was a skilled and experienced workman upon revolving-top flat cards, and to understand that he knew and appreciated the dangers liable to arise from the operation of cards *295 that were in common use. If the door to the cylinder of the machine upon which he was set to work was not equipped as cards in common and ordinary use were, he should show that fact by the testimony of witnesses who knew how cards in common use were equipped, but not by proof that he knew of or bad worked upon two machines with equipment differing from that used on the defendants’ machines and not shown to be in common use. When such evidence is thus presented it is not competent, and when admitted is prejudicial because it erects a false standard for the jury to judge the defendants’ conduct by. Hill v. Railroad, 55 Me. 438; Littleton v. Richardson, 32 N. H. 59; Hubbard v. Concord, 35 N. H. 52; Congdon v. Company, 66 Vt. 255, 262.

This evidence was offered at a time when no testimony had been introduced showing how doors to cards in common use were equipped. But notwithstanding this, if the plaintiff had then stated to the court that he would afterward make the evidence competent by showing how machines in common use were equipped, and that the two machines upon which he had worked were eq nipped like them, as bearing upon his knowledge derived from operating such machines, it might have been received de bene. But as this purpose was not made known to the court, and the apparent purpose of the evidence was to show that the defendants were negligent, by proving that the doors on the two machines on which the plaintiff had worked had fastening devices while the defendants’ had none, it was properly excluded. Tabor v. Judd, 62 N. H. 288, 292. If the plaintiff had desired to avail himself of this evidence for the purpose for which he now claims, he should have renewed his offer after testimony had been submitted showing how doors to machines of this character in common use were equipped ; but as he did not do so, he cannot now complain.

8. The plaintiff’s experts testified that they were familiar with revolving-top flat cards; that for a series of years they had been engaged in operating and selling cards, and had been in sustantially all the mills in New England where cards were used, and in Southern mills; that they had seen cards of the same make as those used by the defendants, and had caused them to be operated under their direction, but had never seen doors hung as they were on the defendants’ machines without a fastening device, except in the defendants’ mills in Penacook.

After the plaintiff had rested his case, the defendants were permitted to show that in various mills in New England, including those specially referred to by the plaintiff’s experts, machines of the make used by the defendants were operated, and that they had no device for fastening the doors. This evidence was competent, as it tended to contradict the testimony of the plaintiff’s experts, *296 and was properly admitted. Green v. Bedell, 48 N. H. 546, 549; Martin v. Towle, 59 N. H. 31; Quimby v. Blackey, 63 N. H. 77; Spalding v. Merrimack, 67 N. H. 382; Perkins v. Roberge, 69 N. H. 171.

4. When the defendants had rested, the plaintiff offered to show in rebuttal that certain manufacturers had affixed fastening devices to cards like the defendants’. This evidence did not rebut any evidence introduced by the defendants, and for this reason, if for no other, was properly excluded. Dodge v. Carroll, 59 N. H. 237.

5.

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Bluebook (online)
56 A. 545, 72 N.H. 292, 1903 N.H. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saucier-v-new-hampshire-spinning-mills-nh-1903.