78 P. 363 | Or. | 1904
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion.
Several points are made in the brief, and were urged at the argument, which are all grounded substantially on the contention that the court erred in instructing the jury that Hylander was a fellow servant of the deceased, and that plaintiff could not recover if the accident was caused by the negligence of Hylander. The question thus raised involves two inquiries : (1) Was Hylander in fact a fellow servant of the deceased ? (2) Is the defense that the injury was the result of a fellow servant’s negligence available to the defendant unless pleaded ?
1. At the time of the accident, Hylander and the deceased were both engaged in the discharge of the duties of operatives. Hylander was not charged with the performance of any duty that the master owed to the deceased. It was not his business to provide a reasonably safe place in which the deceased could work. That duty had been intrusted- by the defendant to other employés, and not to Hylander. Under the decisions, therefore, Hylander was a fellow servant of the deceased, for whose negligence the defendant is not liable to the plaintiff: Mast v. Kern, 34 Or. 247 (54 Pac. 950, 75 Am. St. Rep. 580) ; Johnson v. Portland Stone Co. 40 Or. 436 (67 Pac. 1013, 68 Pac. 425). In Anderson v. Bennett, 16 Or. 515 (19 Pac. 765, 8 Am. St. Rep. 311), the injury occurred through the negligence of one who was charged with the performance of the master’s duty; while here the alleged negligent servant was a mere coemployé of the deceased, working at the time of the accident in a common employment. If the injury, therefore, was in fact due to his negligence, and not that of some agent or employé acting for the master, the defendant is not liable.
2. Upon the second question the authorities are in conflict: 13 Enc. PI. & Pr. 913. In some jurisdictions it is
It-is argued, however, in support of the position that the negligence of a fellow servant may be shown without pleading it, that the tendency of such evidence is to prove that there was no negligence whatever on the part of the defendant. If such be the effect of the evidence, it would be admissible under the denial, because the defendant has •a right to give evidence under his denial controverting any fact necessary to be established by the plaintiff to authorize a recovery : Bliss, Code Pl. (2 ed.)’ §§ 330, 337 ; Pomeroy, Code Rem. (4 ed.) § 664; Buchtel v. Evans, 21 Or. 309 (28 Pac. 67). But we do not understand that the plaintiff is required to allege or prove, in the first instance, that the injury was not due to the negligence of a fellow servant, nor would evidence of such negligence controvert any fact necessary to be established by the plaintiff in order that he may recover. The fact that the injury resulted from defendant’s negligence is put in issue by the denial. Defendant, therefore, may show affirmatively under the denial that the injury arose from some other cause, such as the act of some person not its agen't or employé. When, however, the defense admits that some agent or employé of the defendant was negligent, but tends to show that plaintiff has no cause of action, because the negligent agent or employé was a fellow servant with the injured party, such defense, it seems to us, is new matter, and ought, under our system, to be pleaded.
The defense of negligence of a fellow servant is, in effect, a plea of confession and avoidance. It amounts to nothing more than an admission by the defendant that
Judgment reversed and a new trial ordered.
Reversed.
Decided 28 November, 1904.
Rehearing
On Motion eor Rehearing.
delivered the opinion.
3. Where, in a personal injury case, it clearly appears from plaintiff’s testimony that the injury was due to the negligence of a fellow servant, he should be nonsuited, although such negligence is'not pleaded as a defense, for the same reason that he should be if his proof shows that the injury was due to contributory negligence: Tucker v. Northern Term. Co. 41 Or. 82 (68 Pac. 426). But there is no such question in this case. The bill of exceptions does not purport to contain all the evidence, and the court below ruled — we must assume, correctly — that there was evidence tending to show that the death of plaintiff’s intestate was not due to the negligence of Hylander, a fellow servant, but to that of Jones, who stood in the place of and represented the master.