156 Mass. 342 | Mass. | 1892
The plaintiff, while at work in the hold of a vessel, was struck by a hook swinging at the end of a fall, and which escaped from the control of a fellow workman. The fall was raised and lowered by a steam-engine placed on a lighter between the vessel and the wharf. The orders to raise and lower were given by a workman in the hold to a stageman on the deck of 'the vessel, and by him repeated to the engineer. The hook was in the hands of a workman in the hold, and it was necessary to lower the fall to enable him to attach the hook to a bundle of laths. The order to lower was correctly
Upon the facts, it might be competent to find that the engineer was to some extent a superintendent. The employment and discharge of workmen, setting them at work, and showing them how to do work, are acts consistent with superintendency. But these acts, in connection with the evidence that his station was on the lighter, and his work there the continuous labor of running the engine in accordance with orders transmitted to him from others, show that neither his sole nor principal duty was that of superintendence.
Aside from this, the act of improperly raising the fall when ordered to lower it, was not an act of superintendence. It is
Unless the act itself is one of direction or of oversight, tending to control others and to vary their situation or action because of his direction, it cannot fairly be said to be one in the doing of which the person intrusted with superintendence is in the exercise of superintendence. For the negligence of such a person in doing the mere work of an ordinary workman, in which there is no exercise of superintendence, the employer is not made responsible by the statute. Judgment on the verdict.