3 Alaska 651 | D. Alaska | 1909
Considering the facts set out at length in this complaint in their most enlightened and favorable point of view, we find the plaintiff and Jane fellow servants, engaged in a common undertaking, on the 20th day of April, 1909. While so engaged in the common undertaking of repairing pipes below a gasoline tank on the launch, the plaintiff, in the usual ordinary and necessary scope of his employment, used a lighted, open candle, which he evidently had setting at some convenient reach, at least of his feet, and for some reason desired to remove it. To do so he deliberately
The plaintiff would then invoke an alleged rule of law, which, upon the facts set out, would hold the defendant company in damages for the resultant injury, on the principle that the injury resulted from the negligence of Jane, and that Jane stands in the relation of vice principal to defendant. The case presents for careful consideration the application of what may be , said to be well-settled rules of law to the facts conceded by the demurrer and as alleged in the complaint.
The difficulty consists in the application to the particular facts of each case of the rules of the law of fellow servants and master and servant, now well defined by the courts. I do not consider it necessary to revert in detail or at length to the history of the law of fellow servant as it was announced in the case of Murray v. S. C. R. R. Co. (1841) 1 McMul. (S. C.) 385, 36 Am. Dec. 268, in the United States, and in the case of Hutchinson v. York Ry. Co., 5 Exch. Rep. 343, in England, nor to the modification of the law of fellow servants since the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Railway Co. v. Ross, 112 U. S. 383, 5 Sup. Ct. 184, 28 L. Ed. 787, as announced by Mr. Justice Field in 1884. It is sufficient, I apprehend, to state what is the law now, and apply to it the facts of the case now under consideration.
Without quoting the United States Supreme Court decisions leading up to and embodying the present law of fellow servant, they may be said to have clearly reached the following conclusions, which control this court: That the following duties devolve upon the master with respect to his servants and em
Reverting again to the facts of the case, do we find the defendant company derelict in any of the duties hereinabove enunciated, either in providing the proper tools and machinery or in the selection of its employés? It is apparent that no fault existed as to the provision of tools by the defendant company for the use of the plaintiff and Jane. Nor is there an allegation of the incompetency of the agent or coemployé, Jane', except that in the one particular he refused or failed, upon the order or request of plaintiff, to blow out the candle kicked from under the gasoline tank by plaintiff. Can we, on these existing facts, hold that the defendant company failed in one of its positive duties to provide reasonably safe and competent men to perform their respective duties? If so, the demurrer must be overruled.
The plaintiff was employed as an engineer, and with Jane working at the time as a colaborer. It is reasonable to assume that the plaintiff was particularly qualified to know, and did know, the risks of his employment, and especially in the hazardous work of attempting to repair pipes under a gasoline tank on a launch by the aid of a light produced by a candle. That the plaintiff did anticipate all the dangers to be encountered up to the time he removed the lighted candle by kicking it away is effectually stated in his complaint, when he alleges
Passing for the moment the consideration of any delict of the plaintiff which might constitute contributory negligence, the point then remains for final decision of the case whether the act of Jane in failing or refusing to extinguish the candle kicked from under the gasoline tank was the negligence of Jane in a duty obligated on the defendant company. Jane admittedly was acting in conjunction with the plaintiff in the work, for the time being, just as any fellow servant would, although he was an agent of the defendant, empowered to hire and discharge the plaintiff. Everything was provided for the work in the usual and ordinary way, as to the place to work, appliances, and laborers. We must assume Jane to have been a reasonably safe and competent man to perform the work they were engaged in, in the absence of anything to the contrary appearing in either showing knowledge on the part of the defendant company of the incompetency of Jane or reasonable cause why the company should have known of his inability or failure to fill the position assigned him by his company. Such allegations or facts do not appear in this matter. It therefore follows that the defendant failed not in any of the duties devolving upon the master. Jane’s delict, if such it was, can be attributed only to him as a fellow servant, a delict the company could have in no way anticipated or provided against. The plaintiff must necessarily have assumed by reason of his employment, the very thing done by Jane. It is one of the weaknesses of human nature which no corporation or body can control or prevent.
The decisions have placed the responsibility for the negligence of colaborers upon themselves,. after having held the master accountable, in the wisdom of years of experience and ■observation, for the positive duties hereinbefore outlined. This decision has been reached upon the assumption that the plain
Demurrer sustained.