105 P. 586 | Cal. | 1909
Lead Opinion
A judgment for three thousand dollars was recovered by plaintiffs in this action for the death of their son, O.R. Bridges. The deceased was in the employ of the defendant as an electrician's helper, and was killed by coming in contact with a highly charged electrical wire in a substation of the defendant. This is an appeal by defendant from an order denying its motion for a new trial.
The allegation of the complaint is that the defendant "carelessly and negligently failed and neglected to furnish the said O.R. Bridges with a safe place to work, in this, that the defendant carelessly and negligently ordered and directed the said O.R. Bridges to go among some highly charged live electrical wires from which it had carelessly and negligently failed and neglected to disconnect or cut off the electrical current, whereby the said O.R. Bridges came into contact with one or more of the said live wires and received therefrom a heavy shock of electricity, from the effects of which he died."
The following facts may fairly be said to appear without contradiction. In June, 1906, which was prior to the amendment of March 6, 1907, [Stats. 1907, p. 119], to section 1970 of the Civil Code, relative to the liability of an employer, O.R. Bridges had been in the employ of defendant as a helper for about six months. He was a member of the construction gang, which was under the charge of one Scott as foreman. On the day of the accident, this gang was engaged in the effort to install or move a piece of machinery at the Ocean Park sub-station. To do this it was necessary to fasten a chain-block to a timber which was to be attached to the upper part of the building. The timber itself was to be hoisted by means of a rope and pulley. Bridges started up a ladder with the rope. Before getting to the top, he asked whether *494 the line was clear. Somebody answered that it was. Bridges went on, walked across a truss supporting the roof until he came to several highly charged wires. In attempting to climb over them he came in contact with one or more, and received the shock which caused his death. The current at the substation was controlled by a switch, which, if properly turned, would have cut the current out from the wires. It was this condition that Bridges referred to when asking whether the line was clear. The fact was that the switch had not been turned, and, as the result showed, the current was flowing through the wires.
Before the work was undertaken the chief operator of the defendant had instructed Scott, the foreman of the construction gang, to "open the line," i.e. to cut off the current. The line was used for lighting purposes. It fed "only a few lights and was not important." If this order had been carried out, no injury would have resulted to any one coming in contact with the wires. The duty of shutting off power rested on the operators. No one else (except Scott and the chief operator) did that kind of work.
There were other facts shown, but we have stated all that we think have any bearing upon the one point which we shall consider, i.e. whether, on these facts, the only negligence shown was not that of a fellow-servant of the deceased — a default for which the defendant is not liable. (Civ. Code, sec. 1970) It is, of course, thoroughly settled, as a general rule, that the obligation of the master to furnish to his employees safe appliances and a safe place for work is one that cannot be delegated and that for a breach of this duty, resulting in injury to a servant, the master is liable. He will not be exonerated by the fact that he may have intrusted the furnishing of a safe place and appliances to an employee who would, for other purposes, be regarded as a fellow-servant of the party injured.(Donnelly v. San Francisco Bridge Co.,
In Daves v. Southern Pacific Co.,
Upon the reasoning of these cases, it must be held that the evidence was insufficient to show any negligence for which the appellant is responsible. There is no claim that the wires, switches, and other appliances were not suitable or that they were not reasonably safe for the purposes to which they were applied. It is not charged that the defendant failed to exercise due care in the selection of its employees. The accident was caused by the fault of Scott, either in informing Bridges that the line was clear, or in failing to turn the switch. In either view this negligence was that of a fellow-servant in the *497 operation of the details of work for which proper appliances had been furnished. The employer, having provided safe means for doing the work, does not insure the employee against the negligent failure of co-employees to use such means. The duty of adjusting the appliances to the varying requirements of the work to be done may be delegated to servants.
The order denying a new trial is reversed.
Angellotti, J., Melvin, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. Bridges, the deceased, was working under Scott, who was foreman. He was one of a party of workmen doing construction work at different places along the line of the defendant's railway. Neither Scott, nor any of the men, had any authority to shut off the electricity. It is obvious that the switches would often be far away from the men working along the line, and that the control of the current could not conveniently be a part of their work, or within their province. The evidence shows that one Peacock was chief operator of the defendant company, and that it was his duty to turn off the current when necessary to insure the safety of men at work on the lines, and that none of the men at work with Bridges were authorized to do so. I think the main opinion makes an unwarrantable assumption in saying that men engaged in the work with the deceased were furnished with "suitable means of obviating the danger." They had no authority to do the act which alone would remove it, and there is no evidence that the means were at hand, or under their control. Peacock's direction to Scott to turn off the current did not make it a part of the work in which the men were engaged, nor make Scott, as to that act, a fellow-servant with them. He was, for that purpose, a principal, and his failure to turn it off was the negligence of the defendant.
Lorigan, J., concurred in the foregoing dissenting opinion. *498