Sheetram v. Trexler Stave & Lumber Co.

13 Pa. Super. 219, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 136
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 21, 1900
DocketAppeal, No. 135
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 13 Pa. Super. 219 (Sheetram v. Trexler Stave & Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheetram v. Trexler Stave & Lumber Co., 13 Pa. Super. 219, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 136 (Pa. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rice, P. J.,

The defendants are engaged in the manufacture of staves. Charles Sheetram, a boy between sixteen and seventeen years of age, went to their mill to secure employment. He met there William Trexler (not a member of the partnership), and asked for work. Mr. Trexler engaged him, and when Charles stated to Mm that he had never worked at a mill and would have to learn, Trexler told him that he could help at the cut-off, fill the bucks and wheel out sawdust and slabs. This, it seems, was work that required no special skill and involved no special risk. At seven o’clock in the evening of the same day he reported and was set at that work, but later in the evening (according to his testimony) he was told by Trexler that when he came with a billet of wood to place on the buck near the stave saw, and found none on the carriage by which the billets were run into the saw, he should place it on the carriage instead of on the buck. While thus employed his left hand came in contact with the saw and was so injured that amputation of the first and middle fingers became necessary. He testified: “I was putting a billet on the carriage; I put my right hand clown first; then my left; the saw came by my hand; I don’t know how it was.” There- was evidence that by reason of the close proximity of the carriage to the saw, especially if it was not pulled clear back, there was great risk in laying the billet on in the manner described by the plaintiff. At the very best there would have been a play of but six inches between his hand and the saw, and if the carriage was not pulled clear back —not an unusual thing — there would have been less. Without reciting the evidence bearing upon this point more in detail we conclude that there was sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that the plaintiff was injured when in the act of plac[223]*223ing the billet on the carriage in the manner described. It would be taking too narrow a view to say that he could not recover because he could not more precisely explain how his hand happened to come in contact with the saw. The evidence upon that point is as clear as it was in Cargill v. Phila. Towel Supply Co., 185 Pa. 269, where a recovery for the plaintiff was sustained on appeal.

When an employee, after having the opportunity of becoming acquainted with the risks of his situation, accepts them, he cannot complain if subsequently injured by such exposure. By contracting for the performance of hazardous duties, he assumes such risks as are incident to their discharge from causes open and obvious, the dangerous character of which causes he has had opportunity to ascertain: Wharton on Negligence, sec. 284. This statement of the general rule has been approved in many Pennsylvania cases. Charles Sheetram was between sixteen and seventeen years of age, and unless we assume in the absence of all proof that he possessed less mental capacity than the average youth of his age and class, we are bound to say that he must be held to have accepted risks of the kind described in the foregoing rule: Fick v. Jackson, 3 Pa. Superior Ct. 378; O’Keefe v. Thorn, 24 W. N. C. 379; s. c., 2 Mona. 73. It was as obvious to him as it was to his employers that there was risk in laying the billets of wood on the carriage in the manner he says he did. He needed not to be told that it was dangerous to bring his hand in contact with a saw or in such close proximity to it that a slight miscalculation would result in injury. It is unreasonable to suppose that he did not see the danger. At any rate, even if the court would not have been warranted in saying to the jury that the danger was patent, the defendants were entitled to instructions that there was not sufficient evidence in the case to overcome the presumption that he was cognizant of patent dangers. We are of opinion, therefore, that the defendants’ second and third points should have been affirmed. The fourth point should also have been affirmed without qualification. The legal principle was correctly stated in the point and this, as well as the second and third points, were pertinent to the case, if, as the defendant contended, the plaintiff of his own volition, without any direction or encouragement from the sawyer- put the billets of wood on the cariarge instead [224]*224of on the buck as he had been directed to do. Answers to-points for charge should be direct, clear, unequivocal and responsive. Whilst they may, and in certain cases should, contain such qualifications, explanations or observations as will render the points clear, and bring them into conformity with the facts, the evidence or the law of the case, yet care should be taken that the party presenting the point be given the full benefit of the legal principle expressed in it, if it is correctly and clearly stated and is pertinent. See P. & L. Dig. of Dec. and Ency. of Pa. Law, Col. 2570. The remarks of the learned, judge in answering the fourth point were not explanatory of it they tended rather to draw the minds of the jury away from the legal principle expressed in the point to another principle-which had been fully and correctly stated by him elsewhere. It was not called for by anything embraced in the point, and weakened if it did not absolutely nullify the force of the ostensible affirmance of it. In Kaufhold v. Arnold, 163 Pa. 269, the same point was presented and was qualified by instructions-as to contributory negligence and the duty of employers to instruct their employees. This was held to be error. “The point as stated was exactly true and should have been affirmed without qualification.” See also City of Lancaster v. Kissinger, 11 W. N. C. 151, and Citizens Pass. Ry. Co. v. Ketcham, 122 Pa. 228.

But although a servant be as fully conscious of the danger incident to the discharge of a duty in a particular way as if he-had been expressly warned of the danger, it does not necessarily follow that his employer is relieved of the duty to instruct-him further. There may be two modes in which the duty can be discharged, one safe and the other dangerous, and if the servant be young and inexperienced, and be not instructed, it-cannot be declared as matter of law that the risk of making a wrong choice is one of the incidental risks which he accepted when -he entered into the employer’s service. The law upon the subject is well settled. “ In the text books, and with rare exceptions in all the adjudicated cases, the rule laid down in substance is : When young persons without experience are employed to work with dangerous machines, it is the duty of the employer to give suitable instructions as to the manner of using them, and warning as to the hazard of carelessness in their use; [225]*225if the employer neglects this duty, or if he gives improper instructions, he is responsible for the injury resulting from his neglect of duty:” Tagg v. McGeorge, 155 Pa. 368; Rummel v. Dilworth, 131 Pa. 509; Kehler v. Sehwenk, 151 Pa. 505; Fisher v. D. & H. Co., 153 Pa. 379; Kilkeary v. Thackery, 165 Pa. 584; Neilson v. Hillside Coal & Iron Co., 168 Pa. 256 ; Lebbering v. Struthers, 157 Pa. 312; Stapleton v. Traction Co., 5 Pa. Superior Ct. 253. It will be observed that there is the duty not merely to warn against carelessness, but to give suitable instructions as to the manner of using the dangerous machine or performing the dangerous service.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Pa. Super. 219, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheetram-v-trexler-stave-lumber-co-pasuperct-1900.