48 Wash. 315 | Wash. | 1908
This action was brought by the respondent to recover from the appellants damages alleged to have been suffered by the respondent through the death of her husband while in the employment of appellant, the Heffernan Engine Works, on the 16th day of June, 1906. Said appellant was engaged in operating machine shops. The deceased at the time of the accident had been in the employment of the appellant as a helper for about three weeks. Most of this time he had been employed in outside work, and had been at the shops of the appellant but a few days previous to his injuries. The shops maintained by the appellant were two in number, an inner and an outer one, and the deceased’s duties had kept him most of the time in the outer shop. On the 16th day of June, one John Curry, a machinist and an employee of the appellant, was at work upon a drill press situated in the rear of the inner shop. He made application to the foreman for a helper, and was directed by the foreman to obtain as such helper the deceased. Curry called the deceased from his work in the outer shop, and asked him to assist him in putting a wheel upon parallel bars maintained in connection with the drill press. At the south side of the drill press was a pit or hole about three feet square and ten feet deep. All the guard there was to this hole, after the door which covered it had been taken off for the purpose of doing the work then in progress, was a plank three inches by twelve and about four feet long; so that it will be seen that the entire hole was not covered by the plank. While assisting Curry to carry the wheel, weighing between fifty and sixty pounds, to the parallel bars projecting from the south side of the drill press, the deceased stepped upon the plank and in some manner missed his footing, stepped forward, presumably into the hole, and was precipitated upon
The acts of negligence relied on by the respondent were the maintenance by appellants, without notice to the deceased, of the hole heretofore described, and requiring the work in’ the immediate vicinity of this hole without notice or warning of its existence, and the failure to guard or protect the said hole. Upon the trial a verdict in favor of the respondent was returned in the sum of $10,118. Appellants moved for judgment non obstante veredicto, upon two grounds: (1) the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict; (2) that the special finding of the jury establishes freedom of appellants from liability. This motion was denied and judgment entered upon the verdict. From this judgment the appeal was taken.
We think all the circumstances surrounding this case show conclusively that the deceased, if he was an ordinarily prudent man, knew, or ought to have known, of the existence of this hole, and if that be true, respondent cannot recover, for if it was a dangerous place the danger was apparent to deceased. Respondent relies largely upon the case of Bailey v. Mukilteo Lum. Co., 11 Wash. 581, 87 Pac. 819, where it was said by this court that the servant, when directed by the master to work in a certain place, has a right to assume that he will not be exposed to unnecessary perils, or in other words, that such a direction or order implies an assurance of reasonable safety. This has been the uniform announcement of this court, and we have no desire to retreat from that position now. But it has been just as well established by this and all other courts that, where the danger which beset the servant was apparent, it was equivalent to notice from the master of the existing danger.
Respondent also relies upon the case of Johnson v. Tacoma Mill Co., 22 Wash. 88, 60 Pac. 53, where a carpenter who was making repairs on a mill was injured by stepping back
There is very little testimony which is material to the issues in this case. The only eyewitness to the accident was Curry, who was the agent of the company in the performance of this business. He testified that he asked deceased to help him carry this spur wheel, which is a metal wheel about twenty inches in diameter and three inches thick, and place it upon these parallel bars; that he took hold of one side of the wheel and deceased the other, and that they moved along until they reached the platform. When they stepped upon the plank which we have before described and while attempting to adjust or place the wheel upon the parallels, the deceased in some manner fell and fell astride of the parallel bar.
In addition to this, it appears from Curry’s testimony that they passed near by this hole when deceased came into the shop with him, and that before they brought the wheel they brought a shaft and laid it down within a few feet of the hole. This shaft was to be placed in the hole, and it is but reasonable to suppose that, when the deceased helped to bring this shaft, placing it near the hole, leaving it there and going off to get the wheel in which the shaft was to he adjusted, he
The judgment is reversed with instructions to dismiss the action.
Considering alone the testimony of the respondent in the case, we are forced to the conviction that the decedent knew of the conditions at the place where he was hurt, and that his death occurred through one of those unfortunate accidents for which no one can be held responsible.
Hadley, C. J., Root, Mount, Crow, and Rudkin, JJ., concur.