81 N.J.L. 712 | N.J. | 1911
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court. At the close of defendant’s case, a verdict was rendered by direction of the court in favor of defendant.
Plaintiff testified that several of the rungs were loose and could be shifted back and forth with the hand; that he had complained of such condition to the general manager of defendant two days before the accident, and used the ladder in that condition upon the general manager’s direction so to do, coupled with a promise to repair the ladder. Eor the purpose of oiling some shafting which he said it was his duty to oil, plaintiff had placed the ladder so that the top rung thereof rested against a hanger suspended from the ceiling and through which the shafting operated, the other end of the ladder being upon the floor. Plaintiff said he mounted the ladder, and, while standing on the fourth or fifth rung from the top. the rung upon which he was standing pulled out from the right-hand side and threw him so that he was caught in the belting and injured.
'Pile defendant denied that the ladder was defective and also denied that the accident happened by reason of the loosening of file rung, as claimed by plaintiff. Defendant showed that the surface of the hanger against which plaintiff had rested the top rung of the ladder was rounded, and claimed that the ladder fell by reason of the insecurity of its position, causing the injury to plaintiff. Eo one saw the accident; plaintiff, when found, was unconscious. Defendant further showed that immediately after the accident the ladder was found leaning against, the wall, with the top rung loosened from the side, and that no oilier rung was loosened. A ladder was produced in court by defendant, which defendant claimed was the one upon which plaintiff was standing at the time of the accident, and endeavored to show, by the physical condition of the fourth and fifth rungs, which were mortised into the sides, that the accident could not have happened in the manner testified to by plaintiff. In view of the testimony of the car
The difficulty in the case centers around the complaint by the plaintiff of the defect in the ladder, the promise to repair it, made by the general manager of defendant, coupled with the direction to continue to use the ladder, and the effect of that promise.
Plaintiff testified that he was instructed, when employed, to apply to one Kincade, the general manager, for whatever was required. This was in October, 1906; that in February, 1907, Archbold, a new superintendent, came to the factory, but that Kincade remained there in his former capacity; that the accident happened in March, 1907; that a few days before the accident, he complained to Kincade of the defective condition of the ladder, and Kincade told him that defendant would fix it, and to go ahead and use it; that the ladder had not been repaired up to the time of the accident.
Archbold, the new superintendent, testified that upon his taking charge of the factory he made new agreements with the employes, and relieved plaintiff of any duty that might have been his of oiling the shafting. This plaintiff denied. Arch-bold also testified that Kincade had no authority to promise repairs.
From a careful examination of the evidence, we are satisfied that a jury could find that the ladder was defective; that plaintiff had complained to Kincade; that Kincade had promised to repair it and had directed plaintiff to use it in the meanwhile; that Kincade was authorized to promise repairs ; that that authority continued after the change of management, and that the ladder had not been repaired up to the time of the accident. There remain to be considered but two points—first, whether it was contributory negligence in law for plaintiff to use the ladder in its defective condition, notwithstanding the promise to repair, and second, whether a promise to repair so simple an appliance as a ladder and one
As to the first point, it is, of course, true that a danger may be so great and so imminent that a prudent servant, notwithstanding a promise to repair, should hazard his employment rather than incur it. But it must be a very plain case of this kind that will justify the court in taking the question of contributory negligence from the jury. Dowd v. Erie Railroad Co., 41 Vroom 451; Dunkerley v. Webendorfer Machine Co., 42 Id. 60; Towler v. Adamant Company, 50 Id. 140; Labatt Mast. & Serv. 1025, § 427, where it is noted that the natural disinclination of a workman to disobey orders is an important element in the determination of this question. Whether the danger was so imminent in this case was for the jury to determine. There was no iestimony that any of the rungs had ever come out prior to the accident, but that some of them were loose, and clearly the general manager of defendant did not consider the danger imminent, for he directed plaintiff to use the ladder.
As to the second point, there is considerable authority for the proposition that a promise by the master to repair simple tools or appliances is not sufficient to negative the doctrine of assumption of risk. Marsh v. Chickering, 101 N. Y. 396, is a leading case on this subject; other cases will be found collected in the case note to Brouseau v. Kellogg S. & S. Co., 27 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1052, and in Labatt Mast. & Serv. 1222, 1223, note 8; but on page 1224 Labatt argues against this proposition, and, we think, successfully. See, also, Brouseau v. Kellogg S. & S. Co., supra,, and the case note thereto.
It is the law of this state that although the risk be obvious, the master may still be liable for injuries to the servant, caused by defective tools or appliances or the nnsafety of the place of work, if the master has promised to amend the defect or make the place safe, and the servant continues the work in reliance upon the promise. Dowd v. Erie Railroad Co., supra; Dunkerley v. Webendorfer Machine Co., supra. The theory of these cases is that the servant may put the responsibility for the use of defective appliances upou the master, if the master
To say that the servant, as a matter of law, must, in a given case, waive his right of putting the responsibility for the further use of a defective appliance upon the master, by complaint and promise to repair, and take the responsibility himself by either making his own repairs or going without them, would break down the rule in a large measure.
The cases referred to above which hold that there is a different rule of law to be applied where the complaint and promise to repair is in reference to simple appliances than where such complaint and promise is in reference to intricate appliances, seem to’ confuse the doctrine of assumption of risk with that of contributory negligence. Mr. Justice Swayze refers to this confusion of thought in Dowd v. Erie Railroad Co., supra. The defence of contributory negligence is not affected in any way by holding that a' promise to repair negatives the doctrine of assumption of risk in regard to simple tools, as well as in regard to intricate appliances.
We therefore conclude that the doctrine enunciated in Dowd v. Erie Railroad Co., supra, that although the risk be obvious, the master may still be liable for injuries to the servant caused by defective tools or appliances or the unsafety of the place of work, if the master has promised to amend the defect or make the place safe, and the servant continues the work in reliance upon the promise, applies whether the master’s promise to amend refers to simple or intricate appliances.
For affirmance—Aone.
For reversal—The Chancellor, Chief Justice, Garrison, Swayze, Trenchard, Parker, Bergen, Voorhees, Minturn, Bogert, Vredenburgh, Oongdon, Sullivan, JJ. 13.