54 Wash. 278 | Wash. | 1909
Action for personal injuries. Plaintiff recovered a judgment in the court below. The defendant has appealed.
It is urged by the appellant that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the judgment. It appears that the respondent was injured while working in the appellant’s sawmill, on March 7, 1908. Respondent was a millwright. He had been employed about the mill of the appellant for some time. One S. B. Wilson was the head millwright, and it was his duty to keep the mill in repair and in running order, and to direct new work. Under Mr. Wilson were several millwrights, among whom were Joe Brandt and the respondent and some helpers.
“On the 7th of March I got to the mill about twenty minutes to seven. I changed clothing, took my tools and went to the place where I was working the day before, on the next panel to this one. I stayed there until Mr. Brandt came, which was four or five minutes. I said, ‘What have you got today?’ He said, ‘I don’t know; we will wait for Mr. Wilson.’*280 He was the head millwright for both mills. We waited there for a while and finally Mr. Wilson came. Brandt and I stayed over here about twenty-five feet, and Brandt met Mr. Wilson by the post that was to be put up. Mr. Wilson showed Mr. Brandt this and said he wanted the post put up, as he showed him the mortise. The mill was running and I could not hear what was said, but I saw him show the mortise. Mr. Wilson went away and Brandt called me over to him. I went over to him and he said, ‘We want to put up a post here.’ I said, ‘All right.’ I said, ‘I will go and get an adz and other tools.’ I went over for them and I had to grind them, and Mr. Brandt marked the place with a pencil, and he said, ‘Put that down about two and a half inches for the post to set in.’ I measured with my rule from the outside edge and said, ‘It is only ten inches and the post is twelve.’ He said that another timber goes alongside of it to give the post a bearing. So I said, ‘All right.’ He said that Bunker will bring that timber. Mr. Bunker is supposed to represent Wilson when Wilson was not around, or when he was at the other mill. I started at that and Bunker came around and I helped him, and he went back and got this post. He had left it over on the truck. Brandt said, ‘Let us put the post on the trestle.’ We did that and Brandt went for the tool chest at the millwright room and got a slick and jack. That was about nine or ten o’clock in the morning, and I went to work and framed that sill and dapped that, and also this piece here (indicating) to receive the post. That was two inches, to give the post a bearing. I then waited awhile for Brandt, and in the meantime I ground some tools which were dull and after I got through was standing by the post. Brandt came around about eleven o’clock. He measured up the length of the post and scratched the post. I helped him saw the post. Then he said, ‘I will frame the tenon.’ I went away for a minute and when I came back there was a ladder up here (indicating) and I took my wrench and hammer and went up the ladder and loosened the board on the header. Brandt was just through framing the tenon and he said, ‘Come down here.’ I did so, and he and I carried the post over there. He said, ‘Put your end down,’ which I did, and he raised the post like that (indicating). ‘Now,’ he said, ‘pinch it up,’ and I did it with a pinch bar, like that (indicating). It was pretty tight. He looked at it and said, ‘We*281 cannot get it in that way,’ and said to loose it up, and I did. Then I pinched it over and the post fell. He stood there and I was here (indicating). Then he said, ‘Let us pick it up.’ We picked up the post and stood it up like that (indicating) against the header. Brandt then stood here and said, ‘Put the tackles on,’ and I went up the ladder, and stood up here to put the tackles. Brandt said, ‘Give me the hooks down,’ which I did, on this side. He went to work and grabbed the header.
“Q. What is the header? A. This is the header here (indicating). Brandt looked it over and told Mr. Hagley to get the sling. I looked down and saw Hagley get the sling and Brandt started to put it down here. When I saw that I started down and he put it in. The post then stood like that on the out edge. Then he told Hagley to pull on the rope. Then Mr. Young came up. I saw the tongs here and so I drove them in to be sure. Mr. Brandt said, ‘Pull on the tackle and work the post over a little.’ Then he put the tenon in the mortise just like that (indicating). Brandt was here and I was to the left. Hagley and Young held the rope. The timber was like this here (indicating). Brandt said, ‘The tenon is too tight,’ and said ‘Joe, you get the jack and we will push it up.’
“Q. • What was under the post? A. Nothing there. Q. Was there anything solid under there? A. Only sawdust. This timber was back here. After I jumped down here, there was a block here, and another under the sill. I looked at this block and Brandt held the post, and I thought he was going to hold it. I did not suppose he would let it go. I could see the outside edge of the tenon in the mortise. Q. How far up in the mortise had the tenon gone? A. About an eighth of an inch. I could see the trimming of the tenon on that side, but the post stood slanting a little. When I jumped down, Mr. Young let go of the rope and went for a jack on the north panel of the mill. There was no floor here on this panel. I looked at the block to see which was the easiest. Í stepped down to look at the block and then I just happened to look up and see Brandt had let go the post and had his hand here on the rope close to the tackle, and I saw the post move and I made two jumps, and the second jump was right here on the sill, and when I got on the sill with my foot, the post struck me as it fell; struck me right on the back. Q.*282 How big a post was it? A. 12 by 14 and it was green timber. Q. How long? A. Between eight and nine feet, I think. It was all I could do to carry my end. It was all we could do to carry the post over there. Q. Now, when the post was in this position, as you have shown, with the tenon in the mortise and Brandt holding it, did it require any great strength to hold it in position? A. No, a ten-year-old boy could hold the post, if he would not let go. Of course the moment you pull on the tackle, that is the way it went (indicating). Q. Did you hear any warning cry at all before you were struck? A. No, I never heard anything, only when the post hit me, I let out a yell.”
It was claimed by respondent at the trial, and is also claimed here, that Mr. Brandt was a vice principal, and that he was negligent in not warning respondent that the post was about to fall, and also negligent in placing the sling near the bottom of the post instead of near the top. It is claimed by the appellant that the evidence shows Mr. Brandt was not a foreman and had no more authority over respondent than respondent had over Mr. Brandt; in other words, that Mr. Brandt and respondent were simply fellow servants working together, with no authority the one over the other. We may assume, however, for the purposes of this case that Mr. Brandt was a foreman for the purpose of directing the work, and therefore had control of the respondent. Still, the respondent’s evidence makes it. plain that the negligence which caused the injury was the negligence of a fellow servant in a mere detail of the work. It is not claimed that proper appliances were not furnished by the master. Respondent states that: “Brandt held the post and I thought he was going to hold it, and I did not suppose he would let it go . . . I just happened to look up and see Brandt had let go of the post and had his hand here on the rope close to the tackle. ... A ten-year-old boy could hold the post if he would not let go.” In holding the post Mr. Brandt was performing a mere detail of the work. He was not performing any nondelegable duty of the master. If he was
The respondent relies upon the rule stated in Nelson v. Willey S. S. & Nav. Co., 26 Wash. 548, 67 Pac. 237; O’Brien v. Page Lumber Co., 39 Wash. 537, 82 Pac. 114; Dossett v. St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Co., 40 Wash. 276, 82 Pac. 273, and other cases holding that, where the master directs a dangerous agency into motion without warning, and injury results to the servant, the master is liable. That rule cannot apply to this case because, if Brandt represented the master, he directed no dangerous agency into action. He was holding a post with his hands. A ten-year-old boy could have held it. He took his hands from the post and attempted to hold it by means of a rope. The post fell without his volition, so far as the evidence shows. If that was negligence, it was his own negligence and not that of the master.
Respondent also urges that, if the sling to which the block and tackle were fastened had been placed nearer the top of the post, the post could not have fallen, and that the placing the sling near the bottom was a negligent method of conducting the work. But this method of placing the sling, according to respondent’s testimony, was not the proximate cause of the post falling. Mr. Brandt could have held the post with his hands, as he did at first. But he let go of it with his hands and attempted to hold it by a rope, and the post fell on that account. The proximate cause of the post falling, therefore, was the fact that Mr. Brandt let go of it with his hands. Under the facts, as proven by the respondent, the negligence which caused the injury was so clearly that of a fellow servant that no liability can be attributed to the master.