275 F. 721 | 1st Cir. | 1921
This is an action at common law to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff while engaged in the defendant’s service by reason of its negligence. There was a trial by jury in the United States District Court for New Hampshire, and a verdict was rendered, upon -which judgment was entered for the plaintiff. The case is here on writ of error, and the errors assigned are that the court erred in denying the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict: (1) In that there was no evidence of the violation of any duty on the part of the defendant; (2) in that it conclusively appeared that the plaintiff assumed the risk of injury; and (3) in that it conclusively appeared that the plaintiff’s own negligence contributed to cause his injury.
The evidence tended to prove that the defendant was engaged in building ships at Portsmouth, N. H.; that the plaintiff entered its employ in the month of August, 1919, and received his injury in the afternoon of February 13, 1920; that for the first three weeks he “bolted up”-—that is, put bolts through holes in the ship’s plates, pulling the plates together, preparatory to reaming; that for the balance of the
Previous to the accident the plaintiff had, at the direction of the boss, entered upon the work of reaming overhead alone, having first requested a helper, and been assured that a helper would be supplied, and such was the custom or method prevailing in the defendant’s plant. He knew it was dangerous to ream overhead without a helper, and had always been supplied with one by the boss, as had the other reamers, either before entering upon the work or soon after. The plaintiff received his injury after he had been at work about six minutes, and before he had finished the first hole and a helper had been furnished.
The danger that the machine would kick without warning and the necessity of a helper in reaming upwards were facts well known, both to the plaintiff and the defendant.
The plaintiff, on the other hand, says that, under the decisions of this circuit and of the Supreme Court, a servant may properly enter upon the performance of work known to be dangerous because of a deficiency in the instrumentalities furnished or a lack of a sufficient number of workmen, in reliance upon the master’s promise to supply the deficiency, and may continue at the work for a reasonable time, without assuming die risk of injury from such deficiency, and without being guilty of contributory negligence, provided the risk is not so imminent that no reasonable man would enter upon or continue in the work.
There is no claim that the machine was defective, or that the plaintiff, after he entered upon the particular work, was careless in his method of operating the machine. The claim is that he was negligent in undertaking to operate the machine at all without a helper, notwithstanding the custom prevailing in the defendant’s plant of setting men at work reaming upwards without a helper, and in reliance upon a promise that one would be shortly furnished.
Neither is there any question here as to whether the interval of time during which the plaintiff was engaged in the particular work of reaming upwards without a helper before he received his injury was or was not reasonable. That question was clearly one for the jury, and was submitted to them by the trial judge under instructions to which no exception was taken.
In Odell Mfg. Co. v. Tibbetts, 212 Fed. 652, 129 C. C. A. 188, decided by this court March 12, 1914, it appeared that the defendant was negligent, in that it failed to have a guard in place to protect its employees against the risk of injury from certain dangerous machinery, and that the accident in question would not have happened had it been in place. A few days before the accident the plaintiff notified the defendant’s master mechanic that he would cease work if the guard was not put back, and the master mechanic said to him: “You keep your hat on. I will have that guard put right back there.” The court in its opinion regarded the statement of the master mechanic as “an absolute i promise on the part of the defendant in engaging Tibbetts [the plaintiff] to remain at* work, and in agreeing to safeguard the place in case he did.” In that case, notwithstanding it appeared that the plaintiff knew full well what the dangers were because of the absence of the guard, the jury were instructed:
*724 “If you find that this inducement was held out to him by the company or its agents, and you find it was a reasonable thing for him to go forward there as he did, and he was injured by reason of the defect, then he would be entitled to recover, and there would be no arbitrary rule of law which would hold him to an assumption of the risk”
—and the instruction was held to be correct.
In Seaboard Air Line Ry. v. Horton, 239 U. S. 595, 36 Sup. Ct. 180, 60 L. Ed. 458, the plaintiff, an engineer, was injured through an explosion of a water gauge on his engine. In order to protect him from injury in case of the bursting of the gauge, a thick piece of plain glass, known as a guard-glass, should have been in position in slots arranged for the purpose in front of the gauge. When the plaintiff took charge of the engine he noticed that the glass-guard was missing and reported it to the foreman of the round house, and asked him for a new one. The foreman replied that he had none, but would send for one, and that the plaintiff in the meantime should run the engine without it. He did so for a time, and until the explosion of the water gauge, causing the injury complained of. In that case the defendants, as here, claimed that upon all the evidence the plaintiff, as a matter of law, assumed the risk of injury from the absence of the guard glass. Its contention stated more specifically was:
“That although plaintiff reporter! the absence of the guard glass to defendant’s foreman, and received a promise of repair, yet the danger was so imminent that no ordinarily prudent man under the circumstances would have relied upon the promise, and hence plaintiff, as matter of law, assumed the risk of injury.”
It was also insisted in that case that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. This contention, like that in regard to assumed risk, was based upon the ground of the obvious and imminent nature of the danger to the plaintiff arising out of the absence of the guard glass; but it was held that reasonable reliance of an employee upon the employer’s promise to repair a defect was as good an answer to the charge of contributory negligence as to the contention that he assumed the risk, and that as to both matters the question was whether it could be said, as a matter of law, that the danger was so imminent that no ordinarily prudent man, under the circumstances, would continue in the employment in reliance upon the promise; that—
“To relieve the employer from responsibility for injuries that may befall the employee, while remaining at his work in reliance upon a promise of reparation there must be something moire than knowledge by the employee that danger confronts him, or that it is constant. The danger must be imminent—immediately threatening—so as to render it clearly imprudent for him to confront it, even in the line of duty, pending the promise.”
We do not think it can be said, as a matter of law, that the danger encountered by the plaintiff was so imminent that no ordinarily prudent man, under the circumstances, would undertake the work for a brief period in reliance upon the promise. To do so would in effect necessitate our saying that the established custom and practice of the defendant in directing its employees to undertake such work for a brief length of time was such reckless disregard of human safety that no
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed, with costs to the defendant in error.