Court Opinion

ID: 8188336
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:11:09.186783+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:30.537329
License: Public Domain

Wifslow, T.
The jury found by the special verdict that the machine was not reasonably safe for use, and that the plaintiff’s injury was not a mere accident, but was the natural and probable result of such unsafe condition of the machine, and should have been foreseen by a person of ordinary care and prudence. If the verdict stopped here, it seems that a judgment for the defendant would necessarily follow, because the plaintiff well knew the defective condition of the machine; but the jury went further, and found that a promise to repair the machine had been made by defendant’s foreman, and that *249"the plaintiff continued its use relying on that promise, that ■such continuance of use was not for a time longer than was reasonable for the making of repairs, and that the plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence.
The serious contentions made by the appellant relate to these last-named findings. The general rule that, when a master promises to repair a defective machine and the servant continues to use it in reliance upon such promise, he is not to be charged with contributory negligence or assumption of the risk unless he continues to use it for a longer time than is reasonably necessary for the making of repairs under the circumstances, is not questioned; but it is claimed, in the first place, that the present case comes within that well-understood exception to or limitation of the rule, sharply illustrated by the case of Erdman v. Illinois S. Co. 95 Wis. 6, 69 N. W. 993, where the danger is so obvious, imminent, and extraordinary that a person of ordinary care would not ordinarily consent to incur it for a moment, even under a promise of repair. That was the case of a cracked saw revolving at the rate of 1,700 revolutions per minute and sawing bars of steel, and the danger of its flying to pieces at any moment was imminent and obvious. Ho exercise of care could avoid the terrible danger, and there was no reasonable time within which the operative could wait for repairs and continue to use it. The proper scope of this rule has been several times considered by this court since the decision of the Erdman Case. Maitland v. Gilbert P. Co. 97 Wis. 476, 485, 72 N. W. 1124; Curran v. A. H. Stange Co. 98 Wis. 598, 605, 74 N. W. 377; Yerkes v. N. P. R. Co. 112 Wis. 184, 192, 88 N. W. 33. It has no application to cases where the danger is not so great, constant, and imminent but that a person of ordinary prudence would ordinarily subject himself to it for a limited time necessary for the master with reasonable diligence to remove it. We cannot regard the present case as being one where the court should say as matter of law that it is within *250the rule of the Erdman Case. While there was danger connected with the use of the machine in its defective condition, as the result shows, still it may well be that a person of ordinary prudence would naturally think that by the exercise of care he could safely operate the machine until repairs were made. The only danger apparently to be anticipated was in the use of the file in the jointing of the saw. It appears that this had to be done three or four times an hour, and that it was safely done for a large part of the day on Saturday, and probably several times on Monday morning. It does not appear that the cramping of the file would necessarily take place whenever the saw was jointed, nor that pieces of steel would necessarily fly, even when the file cramped.
But, while we have had no difficulty in holding that the evidence does not bring the case within the rule of the Erdman Case as matter of law, we must admit that the eighth finding of the special verdict raises the question whether the jury have not by this finding brought the case within that rule. By this finding the jury say that “such injury” ought to have been “foreseen” by a person of ordinary care and prudence. If this finding means that the precise injury suffered by the plaintiff ought to have been apprehended as certain to occur, then it would seem that the danger was so great, imminent, and obvious that no person of ordinary care would subject himself to it for a moment, even under a promise of repair. Is this the fair construction of the finding? We cannot think so. The seventh and eighth questions were evidently framed to cover the question of proximate cause, but the eighth question was inaccurately framed for this purpose. It is not necessary, in order to constitute proximate cause, that the precise injury should have been foreseen or apprehended as certain to occur. It is sufficient if an ordinarily careful and prudent person ought, under the circumstances, to have foreseen than an injury might probably result from the negligent act. Meyer v. Milwaukee E. R. & L. Co. 116 Wis. 336, 93 N. W. *2516. Trial courts should carefully note the true rule as laid' down in the case cited and the cases therein referred to. But the question as to the reasonable construction of the eighth question and answer remains. While it is inaccurately and unfortunately worded, we do not think it could have been reasonably understood by the jury as inquiring whether this particular injury should have been foreseen as certain to occur. If such was their understanding, an affirmative answer would be well-nigh, if not quite, absurd under the circumstances-shown. It is difficult, if not impossible, to see how any person could-foresee, in the sense of know, that this precise injury would occur. We think that under the circumstances the words “such injury” must necessarily have been construed as meaning “such an injury” or an injury of like nature, and the word “foreseen” as meaning apprehended or considered probable, a sense in which it is frequently used. With this-construction, the question and answer become entirely reasonable and consistent with the evidence and with the balance of the verdict.
Nor can we assent to the contention that as matter of law the words testified to did not constitute a promise to repair. The plaintiff testified that upon his application to the foreman for repairs upon the machine the foreman said: “You go on with your work. I will fix your machine as soon as I get time.” The appellant places considerable reliance upon Wilson v. W. & St. P. R. Co. 37 Minn. 326, 33 N. W. 908, and Hayball v. D., G. H. & M. R. Co. 114 Mich. 135, 72 N. W. 145, and Standard Oil Co. v. Helmick, 148 Ind. 457, 460, 47 N. E. 14. Examination of these case's, however, shows that they are not parallel to this case. In the Wilson Gase a railroad yardmaster applied to a section foreman, who had no authority to make repairs without orders from his superior, to block a certain frog in the yard, and the foreman, after replying that he had no orders, said that, if he got time, he would fix it “some Saturday in the afternoon.” In the *252Hayball Case the plaintiff, who operated a machine for planing metals, applied to the foreman of the shop to repair the machine, and the foreman said “he was doing one thing after another as fast as he could, and he would get to it after a while. . . . He was doing one machine as quick as he could, and he was fixing one machine after the other as fast as he could get to it.” In the last case relied on the promise was to repair a defective -machine in a factory as soon as the order then being filled was turned out. The court said that, for aught that appeared, it may have required thirty days or six months to run out that order, and hence the promise could not.be relied upon. It is evident in all of these cases that the promise was simply a promise to make repairs at some indefinite time, which might be weeks or months in the future. The promise here was to repair as soon as he got time, and we think that it might fairly be considered as a promise to repair within a reasonable time.
Again, it is urged that the plaintiff continued to use the machine an unreasonable time' in reliance upon the promise. The promise was made on Saturday forenoon and the injury occurred on the following Monday morning. The question as to how long the plaintiff might work in reliance on the promise without assumption of the risk is ordinarily one for the jury under all the circumstances. It is true that the time may be so long in a given case that a court would be obliged to say that the plaintiff was not justified in continuing the work, but we cannot say so here. The case is quite similar in its facts to the case of Curran v. A. H. Stange Co. 98 Wis. 598, 74 N. W. 377, where a similar contention was overruled.
In the examination of a juryman upon the voir dire he was asked by plaintiff’s counsel whether he had any relations with any of the officers of the Travelers Insurance Company, and upon objection to the question plaintiff’s counsel stated that he understood that the insurance company named had indemnified the defendant against loss and was conducting the de*253fense, and that he desired to call the defendant to prove that fact. The court thereupon sustained the objection and directed the jury not to consider any statement which had been made in reference to the matter. Under the ruling in Faber v. C. Reiss C. Co. 124 Wis. 554, 102 N. W. 1049, it is manifest that no error was committed.
One of the grounds urged in the court below in support of' the motion for a new trial was that the damages were excessive. The ruling of the court on the motion is assigned as-error in the brief, but no argument was made upon the question either in the brief or at the bar, hence we do not feel called upon to consider it. We find no other assignments of' error which demand attention.
By the Gourt. — Judgment affirmed.