This is an action of tort to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff on November 4, 1930, allegedly resulting from the negligence of employees of the defendant. The case was heard by a judge of the Superior Court, sitting without a jury, on November 19, 1935. No evidence was presented by either .side. On November 27, 1935, a finding was entered for the defendant, and its request for a ruling that “Upon all the facts agreed to as set forth in the defendant’s amended answer, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this action,” was granted. The plaintiff duly filed exceptions to the finding for the defendant and to the granting of the defendant’s request for the ruling above quoted. The plaintiff agreed that the allegations of fact set forth in the amendment to the defendant’s answer are true, and the defendant admitted, for the purpose of disposing of the law question, that the injury was caused by the negligence of the defendant and that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care.
The facts stated in the amended answer of the defendant, which are agreed to by the plaintiff and the defendant, are as follows: “. . . at the time of the alleged accident the plaintiff was in the employ of the Standard Engineering and Construction Company, a corporation duly existing by law, and was engaged in the prosecution of his employer’s work in the construction of a bridge in the city of Boston; that the general contractor for the construction of said bridge was a corporation named Coleman Bros.; that a corporation named Boston Bridge Works was a subcontractor under the said Coleman Bros, for the structural steel work, floor, and pavings of said bridge; that the plaintiff’s employer and the defendant were employed by said Boston Bridge Works in the construction of said bridge as subcontractors; that said Coleman Bros., Standard Engineering and Construction Company, Boston Bridge Works, and
Apart from the workmen’s compensation act, the plaintiff had a right of action against the servants of the defendant who negligently injured him during the course of their common employment (Osborne v. Morgan,
The defendant does not controvert this position, but contends that the plaintiff’s right of action, if any, is governed by the provision of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, § 15, which reads: “Where the injury for which compensation is payable was caused under circumstances creating a legal liability in some person other than the insured to pay damages in respect thereof, the employee may at his option proceed either at law against that person to recover damages or against the insure! for compensation under this chapter, but not against both. If compensation be paid under this chapter, the insurer may enforce, in the name of the employee or in its own name and for its own benefit, the liability of such other person; and in case the insurer recovers a sum greater than that paid by it to the employee, four fifths of the excess shall be paid to the employee; but the insurer shall not make any settlement by agreement with such other person without the approval of the industrial accident board,” and it maintains that, upon the agreed facts, the plaintiff’s case is governed by White v. George A. Fuller Co.
While the plaintiff concedes that under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 152, § 24, the word "employer” includes a general contractor who engages subcontractors, White v. George A. Fuller Co.
The present case cannot be distinguished from the cases above cited by the fact that the employees in those cases received insurance compensation, while the plaintiff neither received nor had right to receive compensation from the defendant’s insurer. In the case at bar the plaintiff and the defendant’s employees and every other workman on the job, regardless of his position, were engaged in a common employment and had the benefits of the workmen’s compensation act. All the employers on the job, including the defendant, had insured under the act, and thereby provided for all employees the benefit of the act. By so doing they became protected from a liability to pay damages to workmen and employees injured while within the scope of their common employment.
Exceptions overruled.
