108 Me. 357 | Me. | 1911
Action of tort, by the administratrix of the estate, and widow, of Charles Fournier, under the provisions of Chapter 258, Laws of 1909, to recover damages for the death of the plaintiff’s intestate while he was employed in the defendant’s power house, alleged to have been caused by the defendant’s negligence in not warning him of a danger incident to the place where he was directed to work. The case is before this court on report.
The plaintiff’s intestate and two other workmen were directed by the defendant’s "boss piper” to remove a short section of a six inch iron pipe connecting two pumps in the power house and replace it with another piece of pipe to which was to be attached an air chamber. One of the three workmen, Charles Dawley, was an experienced pipe fitter, and the other two, Fournier and Evans, were common laborers or helpers. The six inch pipe was parallel
Mr. Dawley, the experienced pipe fitter, having screwed an eye-bolt into the ceiling about twelve inches from the center of the fuse box, directed the plaintiff’s intestate to attach a chain tackle and fall to the eye-bolt for use in removing and replacing the piece of pipe. Dawley thus described what he saw of the accident to Fournier: "Q. How did he start to get up? A. He passed the chain and fall to Evans on the pump, got up on the pipe himself, and Evans passed him the fall. . . . Q. What happened then, what do you next know? A. The next I knew Mr. Evans hollered. . . . Q. Did you look up? A. I looked. Q. Where was Fournier? A. Well, he appeared to be hanging up in
In cross examination Mr. Dawley was asked if he did not state to a representative of the defendant company on the day of the accident that when he looked up Fournier’s feet were on the six inch pipe, and he answered "That is the way it looked to me.” "Q. That is the way it looks to you now as you recall it? A. Yes.” He further stated that as he looked up it appeared to him that Fournier was standing apparently erect with his hands in front of him still holding the chain tackle. Evans was not at the trial, neither party knowing of his whereabouts. Dr. Thompson who was called to the power house immediately after the accident and examined the body before it was removed noted a small abrasion, "a place where the skin was scraped off,” above the eyebrows, but discovered no other marks or external evidence of injuries. The undertaker, Mr. Bradbury, testified that in addition to the slight abrasion of the skin which the Dr. noted he discovered, in his examination of the body at the morgue, "a small red spot on the top of the head. Q. What did the red spot have the appearance of? A. Well, that would indicate several things, of course, but it was similar to a little burn, not a wound or any thing of the kind, a very small place it was. ... Q. As large as what? A. I should say about the size of a dime, as I recall it now. Q. It looked red? A. Just a little red.” The foregoing is substantially all the evidence relating to the cause of Fournier’s death.
The plaintiff contends that it can be reasonably and logically inferred from this evidence that Fournier’s death was caused by an electric shock resulting from a contact of the top of his head with the fuse box.
The defendant also claims that there was no negligence on its part in not expressly warning Fournier of the fuse box and its dangerous character, because either he knew of it, or by the exercise of ordinary care would have known of it, and further because it was not reasonably to be anticipated that the three workmen would undertake to secure a tackle to the ceiling of the power house among the electric wires and beside the fuse box, when the work to be done could have been performed in an easier and safer way from the floor. Again the defendant contends that Dawley, who directed Fournier to hook the tackle to the eye-bolt, was not a person "who was entrusted with and was exercising superintendence, and whose sole or principal duty was that of superintendence, or in the absence of such superintendent” was "acting as superintendent with the authority or consent” of the defendant, within the meaning of Chapter 258, Laws of 1909.
The defendant’s contention that the cause of Fournier’s death is not sufficiently proved, but is left as a matter of conjecture only, is not without much weight, and yet, if that were the only objection to the plaintiff’s case we might hesitate to decide that from all the evidence an inference might not reasonably be drawn that in some way Fournier received an electrical shock which caused his death. But assuming that inference in the plaintiff’s favor, still the case is fatally defective, for there is no evidence to show that the deceased was in the exercise of due care. The burden was on the plaintiff to show affirmatively, either directly or by legitimate inference, that Fournier did not by his own fault contribute to the accident which caused his death. This principle is firmly settled in the decisions of this court. See Gleason v. Bremen, 50 Maine, 222; State v. Maine Central R. R. Co., 76 Maine, 357; McLane v. Perkins, 92 Maine, 39; Cunningham v. Iron Works, 92 Maine, 501. The case is clearly distinguishable from those where a plaintiff is injured while merely passive in the care of the defendant, without any active agency on his own part in the matter, or, where a laborer, rightfully in his place in the performance of his duty, is negligently injured by some extraneous interference not reasonably to be anticipated in the exercise of the care to be expected of prudent men in like situations, or where he has an assurance, express or implied, that he will receive timely warning of any such interference, as pointed out in Maguire v. Fitchburg Railroad, 146 Mass. 379. In this case Fournier was not passive in the care of the defendant, but active. It was his act that produced the contact with the fuse box, if there was a contact, and therefore it should affirmatively appear that in doing that act he was not negligent but in the exercise of due care. But of this there is no evidence. Dawley says that he (Fournier) "got up on the pipe himself, and Evans passed him the fall.” What he did further does not appear — it is wholly left to conjecture.
Judgment for defendant.