50 A. 102 | N.H. | 1900
The master's duty to furnish the servant a safe place in which to work extends to such portions of the premises as the master knows, or ought to know, his servants are accustomed to use in the performance of the work for which they are employed. Morrison v. Fibre Co., ante, p. 406; McGill v. Granite Co. ante, p. 125. The evidence that the plaintiff while in the performance of his work was injured by a dangerous obstruction in the passageway which the defendants' employees, with the defendants' assent, had for a long time used for the purpose for which the plaintiff was then using it, entitled the plaintiff to go to the jury upon the question whether the defendants had performed their master's duty to him. The motions for a nonsuit and to direct a verdict for the defendants were placed upon the ground that it conclusively appeared that the plaintiff had assumed the risk. The servant assumes the risk of such dangers only as are incident to his occupation, or which, if due to the peculiar methods of the master, are known to him, or of which by reasonable care he could have learned. Casey v. Railway,
There was evidence the plaintiff did not know of the obstruction. The evidence as to the amount of light in the passageway, the situation and color of the obstructing rod and surrounding objects, and that the plaintiff had never used the passageway before, but had seen it in use by others, was proper for the consideration of the jury, with the other facts in the case, upon the question whether due care would have disclosed the obstruction in the passage to the plaintiff. Whether because of the darkness he should have used more care than the case discloses he did use, to ascertain whether an obstruction of this nature existed in a passage used by the other employees with the assent of the defendants, was a question of fact for the jury.
The position taken by the defendants in their brief, that the passage was light and not dark, and that the defendants did not assent to the use made of the space for a passageway, are questions of fact which are not open here. The reserved case states *576
that there was evidence tending to prove the opposite of the defendants' contentions on each point. The facts upon which questions of law are based are settled at the trial term. Gamsby v. Columbia,
Exceptions overruled: judgment for the plaintiff.
PIKE, J., did not sit: the others concurred.