57 Wash. 300 | Wash. | 1910
This is an action for the recovery of damages for personal injuries. There was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, from which the defendant has appealed.
The negligence charged in the complaint is, that the respondent was in the employ of the appellant as a donkey engineer; that the engine was used for the purpose of drawing logs from the woods by means of a cable and snap line, which worked over a drum attached to the engine; that a few days preceding the injury, the respondent notified the appellant that the cable and snap line were worn out and defective, and objected to using them; that the appellant then promised
The appellant thus states the principal question in the case:
“The primary question in this case is this: Was there such a failure of proof as entitled the defendant to a judgment on its motions or requests for a peremptory instruction or to a new trial after the verdict of the jury had established the fact that the snap line which broke and struck respondent was not the snap line to which the alleged promise related, and was not the snap line in use at the time this alleged promise was made.”
The determinatioii of -this question necessitates a brief consideration of the evidence, and the applicable principles of law. The evidence shows that the snap line which broke and struck the respondent was a short line attached to the main cable by means of a hook and eye, and that it was used for making short hauls of the logs. At the close of the respondent’s testimony it had not been shown that any change had been made in the snap line at the time of the accident. ‘The appellant’s evidence, however, disclosed that, a short time before the accident, the appellant took a piece of cable theretofore used at its mill and substituted it for the snap line which it had been using, and that this was the line in use .and which broke and injured the respondent. After this tes
It is earnestly contended that this was not a variance, but an entire failure of proof. We cannot agree with this contention. The gravamen of the charge is that the master agreed to furnish a new cable and snap line, and that it did furnish a new cable but failed to furnish a new snap line. It would be highly technical, therefore, to hold that there was a failure of proof. Whether the appellant continued to use the same defective snap line, or replaced it with another defective one, would not affect the right of recovery or amount to a failure of proof. The promise, if made, could only be performed by furnishing another line apparently adequate for the use. Moreover, at the close of respondent’s evidence, the appellant liad the option to stand on its motion for a nonsuit or to submit its evidence. It chose the latter course, and the case now stands, not upon the pleadings and the respondent’s evidence alone, but upon the case as made upon all the evidence. If the case made by the appellant, or by it and the respondent in his rebuttal, is not in harmony with the pleadings, no objections having been interposed to the evidence, the pleadings will be treated as amended so as to conform to the issue actually presented by the evidence as an entirety. Kluska v. Yeomans, 54 Wash. 465, 103 Pac. 819.
The next contention is that there was neither a promise to
“Any acts or expressions by which the servant gives the proper agent of the employer to understand that he is unwilling to continue in the employment, unless the cause of danger is removed, constitute a sufficient complaint; and any acts or expressions by which such agent gives the servant to understand that the cause of the danger will be removed, constitute a sufficient promise.” 1 Labatt, Master & Servant, § 419.
It is also urged that the servant will be held to have assumed the risk unless his complaint was made in reference to his personal safety, and that the record does not show that it was made upon this ground. Primley v. Elbe Lumber & Shingle Co., 53 Wash. 687, 102 Pac. 763, is cited as supporting this contention. We think the evidence does show that self-protection was the motive which prompted the complaint. The complaint, as we have stated, was that some one would be killed if a better cable was not furnished. The statement necessarily applied to the respondent as his position at the engine placed him in the danger zone. This fact was known to the master. In the Primley case the objection
“When complaining of defective instrumentalities or machinery it is not necessary- that the servant shall state in exact words that he apprehends danger to himself by reason of the defects, nor need there be a formal notification that he will leave the service unless the defect be removed or remedied. It is sufficient if, from the circumstances of the case, it can be fairly inferred that the servant is complaining on his own account, and that he was induced to continue in the service by reason of the promise. It is ordinarily for the jury to say whether the servant’s reliance on the promise by the master induced him to continue work.” 1 Labatt, Master & Servant, § 421.
The point is made that, when the danger is imminent, apparent, and impending, the servant assumes the risk if he continues to work. The promise is in effect an agreement by the master to assume temporarily the responsibility for any accident that may occur. 1 Labatt, Master & Servant, § 431. After-the promise has been made, the servant does not assume the risk of an injury until such time has elapsed as to preclude all reasonable expectation that the promise will be kept. Shea v. Seattle Lumber Co., 47 Wash. 70, 91 Pac. 623; Shearman & Redfield, Negligence, § 215. We think there was sufficient evidence to carry the case to the jury tending to show that a complaint was made to the master, that it promised to remedy the defect, and failed to do so; that the respondent relied upon the promise; that the complaint was made because the respondent was apprehensive of his personal safety; that the master so understood it, and that the injury resulted from the failure of the master to keep its promise. The. respondent was entitled to have the jury advised as to the principles of law applicable to these facts, and the motions were properly denied.
The next point urged is that the appellant should have been granted a new trial on account of erroneous instructions.
The appellant’s requested instructions were but a restatement of the contention made in the motion for a directed verdict, and were properly refused.
The jury returned a verdict for $9,000, and a judgment was entered for this amount. It is contended that the verdict was excessive. The respondent at the time of the injury was thirty-two years of age, in good health, a blacksmith and engineer by trade, and was earning three dollars per day. After receiving the injury he was in the hospital for several days. About a month later he was again taken to the hospital in a serious condition, and one kidney was removed. He remained in the hospital for about eight weeks after the operation. The testimony shows that the* pain and suffering were great; that the expenses for a nurse and surgeon were between $700 and $1,000; and that it is probable that he will never be able to resume his former work. While the damages awarded were liberal, we cannot say that they were excessive.
A physician, testifying as to the effect the removal of the kidney will have on the respondent’s life, said: “I inquired of my superior officials or officers of the life insurance company for which I do the examining to find out whether they would accept this man for insurance.” The appellant’s counsel interposed an objection to the evidence on the ground that it was hearsay. The court, on ruling upon the objections, said: “That is not proper. It is simply repeating hearsay.” Whereupon the respondent’s counsel stated that he would withdraw the question which brought forth the answer. The inquiry was improper, but is not of sufficient gravity to
The views we have expressed require an affirmance of the judgment, and it is so ordered.
Rudkin, C. J., Chadwick, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.