136 P. 711 | Mont. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff recovered a judgment for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been suffered by him during the course of his employment as a servant, by the defendant Missoula Light & Water Company. Adam Hadalin was also made a defendant, but the jury found in his favor. Plaintiff has not appealed, nor did he reserve and incorporate in the record exceptions to any rulings adverse to him during the course of the trial. The Missoula Light & Water Company has appealed from the judgment and an order denying its motion for a new trial. This defendant, hereinafter referred to as “the company,” is the owner of a franchise granted by the city of Missoula, whereby it is authorized to lay the mains and pipe-lines in the streets of the city necessary to enable it to distribute water to the inhabitants. The franchise in express terms grants the privilege of making such excavations in the streets and alleys as are required to install the system of mains and pipe-lines and to keep it in repair. It provides that the company shall repair or pay for any damage done by it to property or persons by reason of the construction or maintenance of the system. Under an arrangement between the company and the defendant Hadalin, the latter had undertaken
It is alleged that the defendants were engaged in excavating ditches in certain streets of the city of Missoula; that they well knew, or in the exercise of ordinary care ought to have known, that the nature of the soil in which the excavation was being made required the walls of the completed portions thereof to be supported by some sort of cribbing or other appropriate means in order to prevent them from crumbling or caving; that the lack of such cribbing or support rendered it unsafe to work in the incomplete portions; that with knowledge of these conditions the defendants wholly failed and neglected to provide any cribbing or support for the walls of the completed portions; that plaintiff did not know of the conditions; and that while he was engaged in his work, the walls of the completed portion crumbled and caved in, causing the walls of the incomplete portion, where the plaintiff was at work, also to crumble and fall upon him, whereby he suffered the injuries complained of.
The defendants filed separate answers; the company, admitting its corporate capacity and plaintiff’s injury, denied all the other material allegations of the complaint. Among other matters designated as affirmative defenses, it alleged that at the time the plaintiff was injured he was not in the employment of the company, but was in the employ of its codefendant Hadalin, under an independent contract, by the terms of which the latter had exclusive control of the construction of the trenches required by the company, at a stipulated price per foot for excavation and refilling, and that neither the company nor any of its officers or agents had any right to control, or was responsible for, any act or omission of said Hadalin. The defendants also relied upon the special defenses of contributory negligence and assumption of risk. There was issue by reply.
The brief of counsel for the company contains thirty-five assignments of error, to most of which they have devoted attention in their argument. Many of them are wholly without merit. We shall give special notice to such of them only as will serve
1. The sufficiency of the evidence to make a ease for the jury was challenged during the trial, both by motion for nonsuit and by request for a directed verdict. The principal contention
The plaintiff was the only witness who testified in his behalf as to the character of the work, the purpose for which it was being done, the surrounding circumstances, and how and by whom he was paid his wages. When his case was closed .no contract had been shown between Hadalin and the company. On the other hand, it appeared that the trench was being excavated for the company, for the laying of a pipe-line which was to be part of its system, and that it was-engaged, with another crew of men, in laying pipe therein as fast as it was completed. It was shown that the plaintiff’s wages were being paid by Hadalin, but Hadalin’s relations to the company were not shown, except that he was directing the work as it progressed. One seeing how and for what purposes the operations were being conducted, and knowing, as he must, that corporations can act only through agents, would naturally infer that the whole enterprise was that of the defendant company. These circumstances, we think, furnish a sufficient basis for an inference, in the absence of countervailing evidence or circumstances in themselves explanatory of the situation, that all the men engaged were the employees of the company. It was said by Chief Justice Cock-burn, in Welfare v. London & Brighton Ry. Co., L. R. 4 Q. B. 693: “I agree that where a thing is being done upon the premises of an individual or a company in the ordinary course of business,
Of course, it was indispensable for the plaintiff to show his employment in the first instance. Without a prima facie showing of the relation established by it, he could not recover. Having the affirmative of the issue, the burden was upon him to produce evidence to support it, and as to this issue the burden was upon him throughout. (Rev. Codes, sec. 7972.) But under the doctrine of the eases cited supra, the circumstances disclosed by plaintiff’s own testimony were sufficient to call for the production of evidence to rebut the presumption thus raised against the company. In a given case the circumstances developed by
The defense that the person responsible for the work is an independent contractor is not affirmative in its nature. At
While we think the evidence sufficient to show prima, facie an employment by the company and a dereliction of duty in the failure to provide against the caving of the walls of the com-
The plaintiff is a foreigner. He speaks broken English, and some of his statements are somewhat quaint. The following excerpts from his evidence will be sufficient to show that it wholly fails to support the allegations in the complaint: “I came back this end and helped this man here; and my bank started to cave in and reached me and buried me up. While I was working in this ditch in the afternoon, I was turned east and the cave-in came from the west. I was digging and shoveling both in the afternoon; digging I believe and shoveling is the same thing. I
The witness Hadalin said: “When I went there in the afternoon about twelve or fifteen feet in length of the bank had fallen into the ditch on the north side of the ditch. * * * When I got back there in the afternoon I found that twelve or thirteen
Marino Scandello, a fellow-workman of plaintiff, testified: “I noticed how far along the ditch the cave-in extended; it was about fifteen feet. De Sandro was in the center of this cave, and the ground was caved on both sides of where De Sandro was. I was there before De Sandro was liberated and taken out of the ditch.”
The utmost that this evidence tends to show is that the plaintiff was caught and injured by the caving of the walls at the place in which he was working. Whether he himself caused the fall of the material by a stroke of his pick at that place, or whether because of the nature of the ground, disturbed as it was by his work, it began to cave there and extended to the completed portion, or whether it began in the completed portion, and the fall there carried with it the walls at the point where the plaintiff was at work, are questions left entirely to speculation. If the nature of the soil at that place was such that the plaintiff’s operations were likely to cause it to fall, this was a catastrophe which he was bound to foresee and guard against; for it is conceded that cribbing could not have been put in at that place until-that portion of the trench had been completed. It is not sufficient that the plaintiff prove the injury. It is -necessary that he go further and show by some substantial evidence the causal connection between the negligence of the defendant and the injury; for the master cannot be held liable if his negligence was merely a condition, as opposed to the efficient cause of the injury. (Labatt on Master and Servant, 2d ed., sec. 1570; Monson v. La France Copper Co., 39 Mont. 50, 133 Am. St. Rep. 549, 101 Pac. 243.) The efficient cause may be shown by indirect
The further contention is made that the evidence as a whole demonstrates that the plaintiff was employed by Hadalin as an independent contractor, and hence that the court should have directed a verdict for the company. During the years 1909 and 1910 the company was apparently engaged in reconstructing and extending its system. It had entered into a written contract for the year 1909 with Hadalin & Campbell, as copartners, under the terms of which the latter agreed to dig and refill all trenches required for the work during the year, at a stipulated price per foot. The contract had been executed to the satisfaction of the company. For the year 1910 it contracted exclusively with Hadalin. This contract the evidence tended to show was to be reduced to writing, but that this was not done because Mr. Brown, the manager of the company, was too 'busy to attend to it. In September, after the accident had happened, this was done. Except the price per foot stipulated for, the writing expressed substantially the stipulations and conditions contained in the one entered into the year before, though there was some discrepancy in the statements of Brown and Hadalin on the subject. Both testified, however, that it contained the terms and stipulations which had been agreed upon by them at the time. The writing was dated back to April 1, the time at which Hadalin actually began work. Under its terms Hadalin agreed to do all the excavation and refilling of trenches required by the company during the year 1910, to supply his own tools and other means of doing, the work, to complete the work from time to time, and at points indicated by the company, in a workmanlike manner, subject to the approval of the foreman of the company, and to save the company harmless against any claim for damages caused by him. The company on its part was to pay Hadalin from time to time on estimates of the amount of work done. This evidence tends further to show that from April until the
It is insisted by counsel that this evidence stands uncontroverted by any evidence in the record, and hence that the court erred in submitting to the jury the question whether Hadalin was
The contention is also made that the court should have directed a verdict on the ground that the danger incident to the employment was shown by the evidence to have been obvious and fully
2. We have examined the several assignments upon the rulings of the court in admitting and excluding evidence. Some of them
It appeared from the testimony of plaintiff that he had been
3. The instructions submitted to the jury are criticised in many particulars, the chief complaint being made of those wherein the court declared that the company must, in order to avoid liability, show by a preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff was employed by Hadalin as an independent contractor. Though the contract was pleaded as a special defense, counsel by specific objection .and exceptions to the instructions on the subject sufficiently reserved the question as to who should sustain the burden of proof. What has already been said in discussing the evidence is sufficient to dispose of these assignments. It is sufficient also to dispose of the assignments upon the question whether the court should have instructed the jury to find for the defendants.
The question whether the company, operating as it does under
Plaintiff cannot complain because counsel did not reserve the the question, as required by the statute. Under these circumstances we must accept the opinion of the trial court as to the law of the case for the purpose of these appeals, and decline to undertake a determination of the question involved. A discussion of it at this time would be purely academic, and any conclusion arrived at with reference to it would be obiter. The same would be true as-to a discussion and decision of the question whether, though the contract, so far as it included work done within the city, was invalid, it was valid as to work done without the city limits; for if the contract was valid, it applied to any work which might be done undér it within or without the city.
4. It is insisted that since the jury found in ’favor of Hadalin,
The judgment and order are reversed and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.