Court Opinion

ID: 8184949
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:07:18.394194+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:22.909012
License: Public Domain

PiNNet, J.
It must be assumed from the allegations of the complaint that the plaintiff was a person of ordinary intelligence and mature judgment. He was thirty-five years of age, and had always been able to do all kinds of manual labor. It does not appear that the work he was performing required special skill or extraordinary precaution. The injury of which he complains was not caused by any hidden *211defect or concealed danger. The situation plainly indicated the particular dangers from which his injury resulted. These perils and risks were so open and obvious that by a fair exercise of his senses and the intelligence which persons of mature years are presumed to possess, under the circumstances disclosed by the complaint, they must be considered as fairly incident to his employment, and that in entering upon his work and continuing therein he assumed the risk of them. Although the plaintiff insists that he was ignorant and inexperienced, and that, as promised, he should have been instructed in' respect to' the dangers alleged and the manner of doing his work,' we think that it was not necessary that he should have been instructed in respect to the particular causes and dangers to which he attributes his injury.
The allegations of the complaint are not entirely consistent, for while it alleges that “ a large portion ” of the circular saws projected from the upper table of the machine, and they were “ not in any way closed or covered, and had nothing about them to protect any person .from injury who might accidentally fall against or come in .contact with them,” it proceeds to state that the boards in front of the saws, loosely attached at the upper end to a framework, “ concealed all but a small portion of said saws,” and furnished no protection; that they were on the side from which the machine was operated, and no person (from the position of the operator) could observe or discover that the saws -were unguarded, unless a particular examination was made; and that the plaintiff, owing to his ignorance and inexperience, made none. The description of the position of the boards, and the manner in which they were secured, indicates that they were placed there to prevent' sawdust and small pieces of bark, etc., from being thrown back upon and in the face of the operator, and were not designed as a protection against anything else. The complaint proceeds *212upon the ground that tbe saws were wholly unguarded and unprotected. The rapidly revolving saws were there, in plain sight, where the plaintiff could not but see them, and he knew perfectly well, without any instruction or information, that if he fell upon them or came in contact with them he would certainly be seriously, and perhaps fatally, injured. There was no possible chance of his being deceived, or for misjudgment on his part in that respect. The result would be inevitable, and in no sense a matter* of judgment or opinion.
In respect to the accumulation of sawdust and refuse matter on the floor, the plaintiff must be held to have known that his footing would be rendered insecure and uncertain by it, and that it exposed him to the danger of stumbling and falling; but this was a matter of common, everyday experience and judgment, and he must be held to have known as much about it as his employer. He did not need, and had no right to expect, any instruction or caution regarding a matter so entirely obvious to the humblest intelligence. He should have cleared away the sawdust and refuse matter, as if was probably his duty to have done. Certainly he required no instruction to inform him of the necessity of removing it, or of the impropriety of allowing it to accumulate until it rendered the continued operation of the machine impossible or dangerous.
While engaged “ in placing lath in proper position upon said machine, plaintiff accidentally, and without fault, or negligence on his part, slipped and fell against said projecting parts of said saws,” and was thereby injured. The most casual inspection could not but have indicated the perils and dangers which resulted in his injury. Its immediate cause consisted in the fact that he accidentally slipped and fell against the saws. It was just as plain to him as to his em- • ployer that such an accident might occur in the course of his employment.
*213Where a defect or danger is open and obvious, although it exists in consequence of the negligence or default of the employer, still knowledge of it on the part of an employee of mature years will be presumed, and, although the employer may be said to be guilty of negligence in keeping his premises or machinery in a dangerous condition, the employee is also guilty of negligence in accepting the service, or continuing in it, and this becomes equivalent to contributory negligence on his part, and prevents any recovery. The cases cited in respect to minors or persons of immature years, or where the danger was not plain or obvious, or where it required experience or skill to determine its existence, are inapplicable. Assumption of the risks and perils of an employment is regarded as a species of contributory negligence. Whitt. Smith, Neg. 398; Darcey v. Farmers’ L. Co. 87 Wis. 249; Peterson v. Sherry L. Co. 90 Wis. 93. The allegations of the complaint clearly show an assumption of the risks arising out of the alleged causes of injury, equivalent in legal effect to contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. In Darcey v. Farmers’ L. Co., sivpra, the findings of the jury on this point were conflicting and left the matter in doubt, and on these grounds a new trial of that case became necessary.
Eor the reasons stated it must be held that the demurrer was well taken.
By the Court.— The order of the superior court overruling the defendant’s demurrer is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings according to law.