Opinion
Decided February 15th, 1913.
Issues and Pleadings: burden on defendant. Master and servant: assumption of risk; concealed dangers; negligence; not connected with injury; minors; carelessness of third party.
A defendant has the right to have the jury confined to the issues made by the pleadings. p. 30
The burden is upon the plaintiff to offer legally sufficient evidence to prove the allegations of the declaration which constitute the ground of action, and, if he fails, he is not entitled to recover. p. 30
To order an employee, a minor (without previous experience), to clean a meat-chopping machine, which could be set in motion by a button on the machine — without warning him with reference to it — is negligence, and for injury, the result of such negligence, the employer would be responsible. p. 33
The principle, that the servant assumes the risk of all open and obvious perils incident to the service he undertakes, does not apply where the servant, by reason of tender years, is unable to appreciate or understand those perils from his own observation. p. 33
To entitle a plaintiff, in an action of negligence, to recover he must show, not only that he sustained an injury, but that the defendant has been guilty of some negligence which produced the particular injury. p. 35
The negligence alleged and the injury sued for must bear the relation of cause and effect. The concurrence of both and the nexus between them must exist to constitute a cause of action. p. 35
Where an employee, a minor, was injured by a machine he was ordered by the employer to clean, and the injury was caused, not by the negligence of the employer, but by the carelessness of another employee, who volunteered to help, and who thoughtlessly set the machinery in motion, it was held, that the employer was not liable. p. 35
In this case it was primary negligence to subject the child, without warning or instruction as to the risk of injury from the inadvertent or careless turning on of the current; and it was concurrent negligence of another immature servant of the defendant that produced the result by which the plaintiff was wrongfully injured; both causes of action were set in motion by the defendant, and whether or not they constituted negligence for which the defendant was responsible, should be left to the jury, and should not have been withdrawn from their consideration (per URNER, J.). p. 39
Decided February 15th, 1913.
Appeal from the Circuit Court for Allegany County (HENDERSON, J.).
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
The cause was argued before BOYD, C.J., BRISCOE, BURKE, THOMAS, PATTISON, URNER, STOCKBRIDGE and CONSTABLE, JJ.
Walter E. Capper (with whom was J. Philip Roman on the brief), for the appellant.
George A. Pearre and J.W.S. Cochrane, for the appellee.
This is a suit brought by a servant against his master to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the master's negligence.
At the time the plaintiff was injured he was about eleven years old, and the injuries sustained were painful and permanent — the fingers of one hand being cut or torn off. At the close of the plaintiff's case, the Court directed a verdict for the defendant by instructing the jury that the plaintiff had offered no legally sufficient evidence under the pleadings of the negligence of the defendant as the proximate cause of the plaintiff's injury. The plaintiff excepted to this instruction, and from the judgment for the defendant he has prosecuted this appeal.
As the prayer refers to the pleadings and challenges the right of the plaintiff to recover thereunder the allegation of the declaration must be examined. It is the settled law that a defendant has the right to have the jury confined to the issues made by the pleadings. City Passenger Railway Company v. Nugent, 86 Md. 360; Fletcher v. Dixon, 107 Md. 420. The burden is upon the defendant to offer legally sufficient evidence to prove the allegations of the declaration which constitute the ground of action, and if he fails to do this he is not entitled to recover. When the evidence offered in the case is legally insufficient to fix a liability upon the defendant under the pleadings, it is the duty of the Court, when applied to by an appropriate prayer, to instruct the jury to find their verdict for the defendant.
The declaration in this case contains a single count. It alleged that the defendant, Frederick H. Blaul, trading as F.A. Blaul Sons, was the owner and proprietor of a certain meat shop located in Cumberland, Maryland, in which shop he carried on the business of cutting up and grinding meat for sale at retail, and that for the purpose of choping and grinding up meats into sausage and otherwise, the defendant installed a machine in said shop, which machine was fastened to the wall and on the top of a table, so that the meat after being chopped up was pushed out of the bottom of the machine into a receptacle below; that said machine had a funnel arrangement on top into which the meat was placed for grinding, and contained revolving knives or sharp coils to grind up the meat; that the machine was run by a powerful electric current, turned on and off by means of an exposed push button attached to the wall above the machine and four or five feet from the floor. It further alleged that in August, 1911, the plaintiff was employed by the defendant to carry bundles and packages of meat, without the knowledge or consent of his parents, and that on the 15th of August, 1911, he and a certain Earl Warner (a boy about thirteen years of age employed then and there by the defendant), "were negligently and wrongfully put to work by the defendant at cleaning said meat chopping machine, which machine was highly dangerous to persons of the youth and inexperience of plaintiff and the said Earl Warner, and that as a proximate consequence of said wrong and negligence, the plaintiff, while so cleaning said machine and using due and proper care and caution on his part, was seriously injured by his right hand becoming caught in the revolving knives or coils of said machine, and being mangled and torn off." The declaration further alleged that both he and the said Earl Warner, by reason of their age, lack of judgment and discretion, were utterly ignorant of the dangers encountered in cleaning and working about the machine, and were ignorant of the workings and power of the same, and that neither of them were ever instructed as to the dangers of the machine or how to safely clean it, or as to the danger of taking out and cleaning the knives or coils or how to properly perform that work; that the room in which they were set to work on the machine was a dangerous and unsafe place in which to work, and that the machine and equipment were unsuitable, dangerous and unsafe for a person of the age, lack of discretion and inexperience of the plaintiff and the said Warner to work with; that Earl Warner was, by reason of his youth and inexperience, incompetent, to the knowledge of the defendant, and was employed by the defendant in violation of the Child Labor Law of Maryland. (Acts 1912, Ch. 731.) The declaration then alleged that the injury sustained by the plaintiff "was directly caused by the negligence of the defendant in so placing him and said Earl Warner at work in cleaning said dangerous and unsafe machine, without being instructed by the defendant, his agents and servants how to clean the same, and how to avoid the dangers incident to boys of their youth, lack of discretion and inexperience; and to the negligence of the defendant in so placing the plaintiff in a dangerous and unsafe place in which to work, and in putting him to work on a machine which was unsuitable and dangerous to one of his age, lack of caution and discretion, and the defendant was further negligent in setting the plaintiff to work at said machine with said Earl Warner because of the youth, inexperience and incompetency of the said Earl Warner, etc."
The proof shows that the plaintiff was employed by the defendant, and that a Mr. Woolford, who had charge of the shop for the defendant, gave him orders as to his work. This shop consisted of two rooms, — a store room and a small back room which was poorly lighted. In this back room was a funnel shaped meat grinder operated by electricity. There were coils of knives inside the grinder, and when the electricity was applied these knives revolved with great rapidity. The knives at times became choked or clogged with ground meat and it became necessary to clean them. In order to clean them it was necessary to take out the coil of knives.
The duty of the plaintiff was to carry packages and sometimes to clean the machine. He had cleaned the machine once prior to the accident. On the day he was injured he was directed by Mr. Woolford to clean the machine; but was not told anything about the machine or warned of its danger. Electricity by which the machine was set in motion was applied by two buttons, — one on the wall of the room near the machine and about five feet from the floor, and one on the machine itself. By means of these buttons the electric current was turned into the motor, and the grinder set in operation.
The evidence tends to show that the electric current was turned on at the button on the wall at the time the plaintiff was put to cleaning the machine, and to start the revolution of the knives it was only necessary to turn the button attached to the machine. The evidence further tends to show that neither the plaintiff, nor Earl Warner, nor Bud Naylor, a colored boy who was in the room at the time, touched the button on the wall.
As a result of all the evidence we are of opinion that the plaintiff was ordered to do a work in the performance of which he was exposed to dangers and risks of injury which by reason of his youth and inexperience he did not full understand or appreciate, and that under the circumstances it was the duty of his master to have warned him of the danger, and to have given him proper instructions. This the master failed or omitted to do, and this breach of duty on the part of the defendant constituted negligence on his part. The plaintiff, of course, knew that he would be hurt if he put his hand in the machine when the current was on. He knew the electricity was applied by means of the buttons, but he did not know which button must be turned in order to start the machine. To place a child of such tender years, without warning or instructions in a situation so exposed to dangers, which he did not fully appreciate, was a clear act of negligence, and if the evidence showed that the injury was the result of that negligence the defendant would be clearly responsible. The liability of a master for injuries resulting to children of tender years from such a failure of duty is well settled. "Ordinarily," said JUDGE McSHERRY in Levy v. Clark, 90 Md. 146, "it may be laid down as the general rule that the servant assumes the risk of all open, obvious and apparent perils incident to the service he undertakes. This rule is qualified when the servant, by reason of tender years, is unable to appreciate or understand those perils from his own observation. In such instances it becomes the duty of the master to warn the servant of the existence of the dangers, which, though visible to others, are not evident to one of immature years and are not evident to him because of his want of capacity, growing out of that immaturity, to appreciate or comprehend them. A duty to warn a child of the dangers incident to a hazardous employment does not arise when the child, though young and inexperienced, actually knows the peril." Chambers v. Woodbury Manufacturing Co., 106 Md. 496.
But there is evidence in this case which exempts the defendant from legal liability which would otherwise attach to him under the principles stated.
The record shows that the injury inflicted upon the plaintiff was directly caused by the act of Earl Warner. This boy was in the employ of the defendant at his meat shop, and his duty was, to use his own language "to clean up things and carry meat out." He was in the small room where the grinder was located when the plaintiff was injured. It was not a part of his duty to take the machine apart to clean it, and he had no instructions to take it apart. On the contrary, he had been instructed by Mr. Woolford, who was in charge of the business for the defendant, not to take it apart. There is no evidence in the case to support the allegations in the declaration that the plaintiff and Earl Warner were put "to work by the defendant at cleaning said meat chopping machine." The evidence, on the contrary, shows that at the time of the injury Earl Warner had no duty or instructions with respect to the machine, and that his thoughtless and heedless, but well meaning act, was purely voluntary on his part, — done not in the line of his duty as the servant of the defendant. His motive was good. But unfortunately resulted in a painful and distressing injury to his companion whom he kindly volunteered to assist.
The circumstances under which the plaintiff was injured will now be stated.
To clean the machine it was necessary to take out the grinder of knives. The plaintiff was in the act of doing this when he was hurt. The current was off at the time. The grinder was taken out at the end of the machine, and the plaintiff had some difficulty in moving it, and he put his hand in the funnel or hopper to loosen it and to push it out at the end. Earl Warner was lying on a board in the room, and seeing the difficulty the plaintiff was having, said he would help him. He went back of the plaintiff, who had his right hand in the funnel, and turned on the electricity by means of the button on the machine. This started the revolution of the knives, and the plaintiff's fingers were cut off.
Earl Warner testified that he told the plaintiff he intended to turn on the current; but the plaintiff said he did not so inform him, and that he thought Warner intended to help him push the grinder out through the end of the machine.
It is a perfectly well settled principle that to entitle the plaintiff to recover in an action of this kind he must show not only that he has sustained an injury, but that the defendant has been guilty of some negligence which produced that particular injury. The negligence alleged and the injury sued for must bear the relation of cause and effect. The concurrence of both and the nexus between them must exist between them to constitute a cause of action. As an injury may occur from causes other than the negligence of the party sued, it is obvious that before a liability on account of that injury can be fastened upon a particular individual it must be shown, or there must be evidence tending to show, that he is responsible for it; that is, that he has been guilty of the negligence that produced, or occasioned that injury. Benedick v. Potts, 88 Md. 52.
Assuming the defendant to have been guilty of negligence in placing the plaintiff to work upon the machine under the circumstances stated, it can hardly be contended that that negligence was the direct cause of the injury. The injury to the plaintiff was the direct result of the negligent act of Earl Warner, who was not put to work upon the machine and who had no duty with respect to it at the time. The act of Earl Warner which directly caused the injury was an independent cause for which the master under the facts cannot be held responsible.
Being of opinion that the Court below committed no error in granting the prayer which directed a verdict for the defendant, the judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
I fully concur in the conclusion of the Court that the evidence is legally sufficient to show negligence on the part of the defendant in putting the eleven year old plaintiff to work on the machine in question without instructing him as to the danger to which he was thus exposed; but I am unable to agree to the view expressed in the opinion with respect to the exemption of the defendant from liability for the injury sustained by the plaintiff in the course of the work upon which he was employed. In view of the principle applied in Pennsylvania Steel Co. v. Wilkinson, 107 Md. 574, and other cases I think it should have been left to the jury to determine upon the evidence whether the negligence of the other child-servant of the defendant was an independent or merely a concurrent cause of the injury. In the case cited the defendant negligently allowed a rope used in construction work to hang down across a street, and the plaintiff's horse became frightened and ran away, not because the rope itself prevented a safe passage, but because an unidentified person pulled the rope and caused it to swing towards the horse as it approached. It was contended that this act of negligence was entirely independent of that committed by the defendant company and that it was consequently exempt from liability in the absence of proof that the rope was pulled towards the horse by a servant of the defendant acting within the scope of his employment. This contention was overruled. It was held that the defendant was "chargeable with the negligence of the person who moved the rope, whether he was in its employ or not," and that his act must be imputed to the defendant company "as it was at most an intervening cause, and not a sufficient and independent cause by which the defendant would be relieved from responsibility." The case was held to be within the rule stated by Addison in his work on Torts, 3rd Ed., page 5, and quoted with approval by JUDGE ALVEY in Baltimore City Passenger Railway Company v. Kemp, 61 Md. 81, "that whosoever does an illegal act is answerable for all the consequences that ensue in the ordinary and natural course of events, though those consequences be immediately and directly brought about by the intervening agency of others, provided that the intervening against were set in motion by the primary wrongdoer, or provided their acts causing the damage were the necessary or legal or natural consequence of the original wrongful act." The movement of the rope, under the circumstances was held to have been "plainly induced by the wrongful act of the defendant in permitting it to hang over the highway in the position described," and upon the principle stated the defendant was declared to be liable to the plaintiff for the injury "sustained in consequence of the negligent handling or movement of the rope." It was said that "the question of remote and proximate cause is often perplexing and embarrassing, and at times very difficult to determine," but "the true rule is that what is proximate cause of an injury is ordinarily a question for the jury."
In District of Columbia v. Dempsey, 13 Appeal Cases, 533, cited in the opinion in Penn. Steel Co. v. Wilkinson, and said to be identical with it in principle, a broken telephone wire was negligently left suspended from a tree over the street. Within a few minutes before the accident a stranger fastened the wire to a tree in such manner as to form a loop, and in this the plaintiff was caught and injured. The stranger's intervention was held to have been a further and concurrent cause of the injury and not an independent cause which would relieve the defendant.
This Court said in Maryland Steel Co. v. Marney, 88 Md. 495 and in Baltimore and Potomac R.R. Co. v. Reaney, 42 Md. 136, that "the law is a practical science, and Courts do not indulge in refinements and subtleties, as to causation, that would defeat the claims of natural justice. They rather adopt the practical rule, that the efficient and predominating cause, in producing a given event or effect, though there may be subordinate and dependent causes in operation, must be looked to in determining the rights and liabilities of the parties concerned." It was further said that "no wrongdoer ought to be allowed to apportion or qualify his own wrong; and that, as a loss has actually happened whilst his own wrongful act was in force and operation, he ought not to be permitted to set up as a defense, that there was a more immediate cause of the loss, if that cause was put into operation by his own wrongful act." To entitle him to exemption, he must show not only that the same loss might have happened, but that it must have happened, if the act complained of had not been done."
In Chambers v. Woodbury Mfg. Co., 106 Md. 496, there were five young girls employed to "doff" bobbins in the defendant's factory, and they were required at certain intervals in their work to wait for short periods on a platform outside the building. The platform was protected by a railing composed of two horizontal pipes, with a space of seventeen inches between the lower one and the floor of the platform. There were no seats on the platform, and while one of the girls, eleven years old, was seated on the floor near the outer edge, in the way customarily adopted, another girl came across the platform to slap her in play, and in moving her body to avoid the slap the first-mentioned child passed through the space between the lower rail and the floor, and falling to the ground was seriously injured. The Court held that the evidence was legally sufficient to require the submission of the case to the jury.
It was held in Sheridan v. Brooklyn N.R. Co., 36 N.Y. 41, that the negligence of a third person in pushing a boy from the platform of a car did not exempt the railway company from liability for the resulting injury where it negligently required him to stay on the platform; and in Carterville v. Cook, 129 Ill. 152, it was held that a boy who was negligently shoved by another boy from an unguarded side-walk, elevated about six feet above the ground, had a right of action against the municipal corporation by which the sidewalk was maintained.
In Morris v. Stanfield, 81 Ill. App. 264, it was declared that "If it was negligence to put a boy under thirteen years of age at work in a factory within a few inches of an unprotected buzz saw, any act of a fellow-servant, not wilfully intended to injure appellee, that brought him in contact with the saw, was a concurrent act of negligence."
In the present case the primary negligence consisted in subjecting this little boy, without warning or instruction, to the risk of injury from the inadvertent or careless switching on of the electric current while the machine was being cleaned; and the concurrent negligence was the act of another immature servant of the defendant in producing the very result to the hazard of which the plaintiff was wrongfully exposed. The evidence tends to show that both the causes which thus contributed to the accident were "set in motion" by the defendant. He was responsible for the presence of both children at the place of danger, and the proof is that both had the same general duties under their employment. The testimony of Earl Warner, the thirteen year old boy, was to the effect that he "most always cleaned the machine." They were in the dimly lighted room together when the plaintiff started to clean the meat grinder, and as he had some difficulty in detaching the coil of knives from the cylinder, Earl, not seeing in the imperfect light that the plaintiff's hand was far enough down in the hopper to be caught, undertook to loosen the coil by turning on the current. The evidence is that it was necessary to take the machine apart in order to clean it, and while Earl states that he had been told not to take it apart for that purpose, yet, as he had been cleaning it "most always" as part of his duties, and as his younger associate was actually put to work at a process which could only be accomplished by removing the knives, it was a question for the jury as to whether the older boy was acting in the natural course of his duty when he made his unfortunate attempt to give assistance in the work. If he had been of sufficient age and discretion, he would not have turned on the current without exercising more care to avoid injury to his companion. If the room had not been poorly lighted, the plaintiff's peril could have been more readily observed. If the plaintiff had been told that the button on the machine was the only check at that time upon the current, he might have been on his guard against the danger when the other boy approached the machine to assist. If the switch on the wall had been turned off, as it should have been, while the plaintiff was cleaning the grinder, the accident would probably not have occurred. The causes and conditions which produced the plaintiff's injury were thus clearly co-operative and interdependent, and each was attributable, upon the evidence, to the defendant's negligence. In my view of the case it is particularly appropriate for the application of the principle of the decisions above cited, and should not have been withdrawn from the jury. If the declaration does not correctly describe the negligence which the proof discloses, I think the plaintiff should be given an opportunity to amend and should not be denied recovery by a conclusive judgment on this appeal.