84 P. 847 | Or. | 1906
delivered the opinion.
This is an action to recover damages for a personal injury received by the plaintiff while in the employ of the defendant. On October 13, 1903, he was engaged with other employees in putting up a telephone cable in the City of Portland, and while at work was knocked or thrown from the pole upon which he
The plaintiff was an experienced lineman and had been engaged in that business for three or four years. He had worked for the defendant a considerable portion of the time, and had assisted in putting up cables in the same manner, with the same appliances, and under the same system as at the time of the accident. He commenced work for the defendant the last time about a week before the accident, and knew the method and appliances used by it in stringing its cables, and was familiar with the manner in which the work was done, and with such knowledge entered its employment. There was evidence tending to show that other, and perhaps safer, methods and appliances were sometimes used by telephone companies in stringing their cables, such as a sheave having an iron frame to which the cable was attached, or hooks made of hard wire or tempered steel fastened to the cable by a clamp or wooden sheave to run on the messenger and attached to an iron frame having a hook at the bottom in which the cable was placed and tied with mar-line; but there was no evidence that the hooks and marline as furnished by defendant were not such as the usage of the business sanctioned as reasonably safe when properly used. Expert testimony was offered and admitted to the effect that the hooks and marline, as placed on the cable at the time of the accident, were not sufficient to support it, but should have been more securely fastened and placed nearer together. At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, the court held that the evidence was insufficient to entitle him to recover, and granted an involuntary nonsuit.
A servant who voluntarily enters the employment of another, with knowledge of the defective appliances or methods used by that other, cannot be heard to say that he did not appreciate or realize the danger, where the defect was obvious and the danger would have been known and appreciated by an ordinarily prudent person of his intelligence and experience: St. Louis Cordage Co. v. Miller, 126 Fed. 495 (61 C, C. A. 477, 63 L. R. A. 551). There was nothing intricate or complicated about the work in which plaintiff was engaged. The appliances furnished
From these views it follows that the judgment must be affirmed. Affirmed.